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Photographic film
Photographic film
from Wikipedia
Undeveloped 24-exposure roll of Kodak Ultramax 400, a consumer-grade color negative film stock

Photographic film is a strip or sheet of transparent film base coated on one side with a gelatin emulsion containing microscopically small light-sensitive silver halide crystals. The sizes and other characteristics of the crystals determine the sensitivity, contrast, and resolution of the film.[1] Film is typically segmented in frames, that give rise to separate photographs.[2]

The emulsion will gradually darken if left exposed to light, but the process is too slow and incomplete to be of any practical use. Instead, a very short exposure to the image formed by a camera lens is used to produce only a very slight chemical change, proportional to the amount of light absorbed by each crystal. This creates an invisible latent image in the emulsion, which can be chemically developed into a visible photograph. In addition to visible light, all films are sensitive to ultraviolet light, X-rays, gamma rays, and high-energy particles. Unmodified silver halide crystals are sensitive only to the blue part of the visible spectrum, producing unnatural-looking renditions of some colored subjects. This problem was resolved with the discovery that certain dyes, called sensitizing dyes, when adsorbed onto the silver halide crystals made them respond to other colors as well. First orthochromatic (sensitive to blue and green) and finally panchromatic (sensitive to all visible colors) films were developed. Panchromatic film renders all colors in shades of gray approximately matching their subjective brightness. By similar techniques, special-purpose films can be made sensitive to the infrared (IR) region of the spectrum.[3]

Nikon F100 analog camera during loading of 35mm film

In black-and-white photographic film, there is usually one layer of silver halide crystals. When the exposed silver halide grains are developed, the silver halide crystals are converted to metallic silver, which blocks light and appears as the black part of the film negative. Color film has at least three sensitive layers, incorporating different combinations of sensitizing dyes. Typically the blue-sensitive layer is on top, followed by a yellow filter layer to stop any remaining blue light from affecting the layers below. Next comes a green-and-blue sensitive layer, and a red-and-blue sensitive layer, which record the green and red images respectively. During development, the exposed silver halide crystals are converted to metallic silver, just as with black-and-white film. But in a color film, the by-products of the development reaction simultaneously combine with chemicals known as color couplers that are included either in the film itself or in the developer solution to form colored dyes. Because the by-products are created in direct proportion to the amount of exposure and development, the dye clouds formed are also in proportion to the exposure and development. Following development, the silver is converted back to silver halide crystals in the bleach step. It is removed from the film during the process of fixing the image on the film with a solution of ammonium thiosulfate or sodium thiosulfate (hypo or fixer).[4] Fixing leaves behind only the formed color dyes, which combine to make up the colored visible image. Later color films, like Kodacolor II, have as many as 12 emulsion layers,[5] with upwards of 20 different chemicals in each layer.

Photographic film and film stock tend to be similar in composition and speed, but often not in other parameters such as frame size and length. Silver halide photographic paper is also similar to photographic film.

Before the emergence of digital photography, photographs on film had to be developed to produce negatives or projectable slides, and negatives had to be printed as positive images, usually in enlarged form. This was usually done by photographic laboratories, but many amateurs did their own processing.

Characteristics of film

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Film basics

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Layers of 35 mm color film:
  1. Film base
  2. Subbing layer
  3. Red light sensitive layer
  4. Green light sensitive layer
  5. Yellow filter
  6. Blue light sensitive layer
  7. UV Filter
  8. Protective layer
  9. Visible light exposing film

There are several types of photographic film, including:

  • Print film, when developed, yields transparent negatives with the light and dark areas and colors (if color film is used) inverted to their respective complementary colors. This type of film is designed to be printed onto photographic paper, usually by means of an enlarger but in some cases by contact printing. The paper is then itself developed. The second inversion that results restores light, shade and color to their normal appearance. Color negatives incorporate an orange color correction mask[6][7] that compensates for unwanted dye absorptions and improves color accuracy in the prints. Although color processing is more complex and temperature-sensitive than black-and-white processing, the wide availability of commercial color processing and scarcity of service for black-and-white prompted the design of some black-and-white films which are processed in exactly the same way as standard color film.
  • Color reversal film produces positive transparencies, also known as diapositives. Transparencies can be reviewed with the aid of a magnifying loupe and a lightbox. If mounted in small metal, plastic or cardboard frames for use in a slide projector or slide viewer they are commonly called slides. Reversal film is often marketed as "slide film". Large-format color reversal sheet film is used by some professional photographers, typically to originate very-high-resolution imagery for digital scanning into color separations for mass photomechanical reproduction. Photographic prints can be produced from reversal film transparencies, but positive-to-positive print materials for doing this directly (e.g. Ektachrome paper, Cibachrome/Ilfochrome) have all been discontinued, so it now requires the use of an internegative to convert the positive transparency image into a negative transparency, which is then printed as a positive print.[8]
  • Black-and-white reversal film exists but is very uncommon. Conventional black-and-white negative film can be reversal-processed to produce black-and-white slides, as by dr5 Chrome.[9] Although kits of chemicals for black-and-white reversal processing may no longer be available to amateur darkroom enthusiasts, an acid bleaching solution, the only unusual component which is essential, is easily prepared from scratch. Black-and-white transparencies may also be produced by printing negatives onto special positive print film, still available from some specialty photographic supply dealers.[10]

In order to produce a usable image, the film needs to be exposed properly. The amount of exposure variation that a given film can tolerate, while still producing an acceptable level of quality, is called its exposure latitude. Color print film generally has greater exposure latitude than other types of film. Additionally, because print film must be printed to be viewed, after-the-fact corrections for imperfect exposure are possible during the printing process.

Plot of image density (D) vs. log exposure (H), yields a characteristic S-curve (H&D curve) for each type of film to determine its sensitivity. Changing the emulsion properties or the processing parameters will move the curve to the left or right. Changing the exposure will move along the curve, helping to determine what exposure is needed for a given film. Note the non-linear response at the far left ("toe") and right ("shoulder") of the curve.[11]

The concentration of dyes or silver halide crystals remaining on the film after development is referred to as optical density, or simply density; the optical density is proportional to the logarithm of the optical transmission coefficient of the developed film. A dark image on the negative is of higher density than a more transparent image.

Most films are affected by the physics of silver grain activation (which sets a minimum amount of light required to expose a single grain) and by the statistics of random grain activation by photons. The film requires a minimum amount of light before it begins to expose, and then responds by progressive darkening over a wide dynamic range of exposure until all of the grains are exposed, and the film achieves (after development) its maximum optical density.

Over the active dynamic range of most films, the density of the developed film is proportional to the logarithm of the total amount of light to which the film was exposed, so the transmission coefficient of the developed film is proportional to a power of the reciprocal of the brightness of the original exposure. The plot of the density of the film image against the log of the exposure is known as an H&D curve.[12] This effect is due to the statistics of grain activation: as the film becomes progressively more exposed, each incident photon is less likely to impact a still-unexposed grain, yielding the logarithmic behavior. A simple, idealized statistical model yields the equation density = 1 – ( 1 – k) light, where light is proportional to the number of photons hitting a unit area of film, k is the probability of a single photon striking a grain (based on the size of the grains and how closely spaced they are), and density is the proportion of grains that have been hit by at least one photon. The relationship between density and log exposure is linear for photographic films except at the extreme ranges of maximum exposure (D-max) and minimum exposure (D-min) on an H&D curve, so the curve is characteristically S-shaped (as opposed to digital camera sensors which have a linear response through the effective exposure range).[13] The sensitivity (i.e., the ISO speed) of a film can be affected by changing the length or temperature of development, which would move the H&D curve to the left or right (see figure).[14][15]

If parts of the image are exposed heavily enough to approach the maximum density possible for a print film, then they will begin losing the ability to show tonal variations in the final print. Usually those areas will be considered overexposed and will appear as featureless white on the print. Some subject matter is tolerant of very heavy exposure. For example, sources of brilliant light, such as a light bulb or the sun, generally appear best as a featureless white on the print.

Likewise, if part of an image receives less than the beginning threshold level of exposure, which depends upon the film's sensitivity to light – or speed – the film there will have no appreciable image density, and will appear on the print as a featureless black. Some photographers use their knowledge of these limits to determine the optimum exposure for a photograph; for one example, see the Zone System. Most automatic cameras instead try to achieve a particular average density.

Color films can have many layers. The film base can have an antihalation layer applied to it or be dyed. This layer prevents light from reflecting from within the film, increasing image quality. This also can make films exposable on only one side, as it prevents exposure from behind the film. This layer is bleached after development to make it clear, thus making the film transparent. The antihalation layer, besides having a black colloidal silver sol pigment for absorbing light, can also have two UV absorbents to improve lightfastness of the developed image, an oxidized developer scavenger, dyes for compensating for optical density during printing, solvents, gelatin and disodium salt of 3,5- disulfocatechol.[16] If applied to the back of the film, it also serves to prevent scratching, as an antistatic measure due to its conductive carbon content, and as a lubricant to help transport the film through mechanisms. The antistatic property is necessary to prevent the film from getting fogged under low humidity, and mechanisms to avoid static are present in most if not all films. If applied on the back it is removed during film processing. If applied it may be on the back of the film base in triacetate film bases or in the front in PET film bases, below the emulsion stack.[17] An anticurl layer and a separate antistatic layer may be present in thin high resolution films that have the antihalation layer below the emulsion. PET film bases are often dyed, specially because PET can serve as a light pipe; black and white film bases tend to have a higher level of dying applied to them. The film base needs to be transparent but with some density, perfectly flat, insensitive to light, chemically stable, resistant to tearing and strong enough to be handled manually and by camera mechanisms and film processing equipment, while being chemically resistant to moisture and the chemicals used during processing without losing strength, flexibility or changing in size.

The subbing layer is essentially an adhesive that allows the subsequent layers to stick to the film base. The film base was initially made of highly flammable cellulose nitrate, which was replaced by cellulose acetate films, often cellulose triacetate film (safety film), which in turn was replaced in many films (such as all print films, most duplication films and some other specialty films) by a polyethylene terephthalate (also known as Mylar) plastic film base. Films with a triacetate base can suffer from vinegar syndrome, a decomposition process accelerated by warm and humid conditions, that releases acetic acid which is the characteristic component of vinegar, imparting the film a strong vinegar smell, accelerating damage within the film and possibly even damaging surrounding metal and films.[18] Films are usually spliced using a special adhesive tape; those with PET layers can be ultrasonically spliced or their ends melted and then spliced.

The emulsion layers of films are made by dissolving pure silver in nitric acid to form silver nitrate crystals, which are mixed with other chemicals to form silver halide grains, which are then suspended in gelatin and applied to the film base. The size and hence the light sensitivity of these grains determines the speed of the film; since films contain real silver (as silver halide), faster films with larger crystals are more expensive and potentially subject to variations in the price of silver metal. Also, faster films have more grain, since the grains (crystals) are larger. Each crystal is often 0.2 to 2 microns in size; in color films, the dye clouds that form around the silver halide crystals are often 25 microns across.[19] The crystals can be shaped as cubes, flat rectangles, tetradecadedra,[20] or be flat and resemble a triangle with or without clipped edges; this type of crystal is known as a T-grain crystal or a tabular grain (T-grains). Films using T-grains are more sensitive to light without using more silver halide since they increase the surface area exposed to light by making the crystals flatter and larger in footprint instead of simply increasing their volume.[21] T-grains can also have a hexagonal shape. These grains also have reduced sensitivity to blue light which is an advantage since silver halide is most sensitive to blue light than other colors of light. This was traditionally solved by the addition of a blue-blocking filter layer in the film emulsion, but T-grains have allowed this layer to be removed. Also the grains may have a "core" and "shell" where the core, made of silver iodobromide, has higher iodine content than the shell, which improves light sensitivity, these grains are known as Σ-Grains.[16]

The exact silver halide used is either silver bromide or silver bromochloroiodide, or a combination of silver bromide, chloride and iodide.[22][23][24] Silver iodobromide may be used as a silver halide.[16]

Silver halide crystals can be made in several shapes for use in photographic films. For example, AgBrCl hexagonal tabular grains can be used for color negative films, AgBr octahedral grains can be used for instant color photography films, AgBrl cubo-octahedral grains can be used for color reversal films, AgBr hexagonal tabular grains can be used for medical X-ray films, and AgBrCl cubic grains can be used for graphic arts films.[16]

In color films, each emulsion layer has silver halide crystals that are sensitized to one particular color (wavelength of light) via sentizing dyes, to that they will be made sensitive to only one color of light, and not to others, since silver halide particles are intrinsically sensitive only to wavelengths below 450 nm (which is blue light). The sensitizing dyes are absorbed at dislocations in the silver halide particles in the emulsion on the film. The sensitizing dyes may be supersensitized with a supersensitizing dye, that assists the function of the sensitizing dye and improves the efficiency of photon capture by silver halide.[16] Each layer has a different type of color dye forming coupler: in the blue sensitive layer, the coupler forms a yellow dye; in the green sensitive layer the coupler forms a magenta dye, and in the red sensitive layer the coupler forms a cyan dye. Color films often have an UV blocking layer. Each emulsion layer in a color film may itself have three layers: a slow, medium and fast layer, to allow the film to capture higher contrast images.[16] The color dye couplers are inside oil droplets dispersed in the emulsion around silver halide crystals, forming a silver halide grain. Here the oil droplets act as a surfactant, also protecting the couplers from chemical reactions with the silver halide and from the surrounding gelatin. During development, oxidized developer diffuses into the oil droplets and combines with the dye couplers to form dye clouds; the dye clouds only form around exposed silver halide crystals. The fixer then removes the silver halide crystals leaving only the dye clouds: this means that developed color films may not contain silver while undeveloped films do contain silver; this also means that the fixer can start to contain silver which can then be removed through electrolysis.[25][citation needed] Color films also contain light filters to filter out certain colors as the light passes through the film: often there is a blue light filter between the blue and green sensitive layers and a yellow filter before the red sensitive layer; in this way each layer is made sensitive to only a certain color of light.[26]

The couplers need to be made resistant to diffusion (non-diffusible) so that they will not move between the layers of the film[16] and thus cause incorrect color rendition as the couplers are specific to either cyan, magenta or yellow colors. This is done by making couplers with a ballast group such as a lipophilic group (oil-protected) and applying them in oil droplets to the film, or a hydrophilic group, or in a polymer layer such as a loadable latex layer with oil-protected couplers, in which case they are considered to be polymer-protected.[16]

The color couplers may be colorless and be chromogenic or be colored. Colored couplers are used to improve the color reproduction of film. The first coupler which is used in the blue layer remains colorless to allow all light to pass through, but the coupler used in the green layer is colored yellow, and the coupler used in the red layer is light pink. Yellow was chosen to block any remaining blue light from exposing the underlying green and red layers (since yellow can be made from green and red). Each layer should only be sensitive to a single color of light and allow all others to pass through. Because of these colored couplers, the developed film appears orange. Colored couplers mean that corrections through color filters need to be applied to the image before printing.[21] Printing can be carried out by using an optical enlarger, or by scanning the image, correcting it using software and printing it using a digital printer.

Kodachrome films have no couplers; the dyes are instead formed by a long sequence of steps, limiting adoption among smaller film processing companies.

Black and white films are very simple by comparison, only consisting of silver halide crystals suspended in a gelatin emulsion which sits on a film base with an antihalation back.[27]

Many films contain a top supercoat layer to protect the emulsion layers from damage.[28] Some manufacturers manufacture their films with daylight, tungsten (named after the tungsten filament of incandescent and halogen lamps) or fluorescent lighting in mind, recommending the use of lens filters, light meters and test shots in some situations to maintain color balance, or by recommending the division of the ISO value of the film by the distance of the subject from the camera to get an appropriate f-number value to be set in the lens.[29][30]

Examples of Color films are Kodachrome, often processed using the K-14 process, Kodacolor, Ektachrome, which is often processed using the E-6 process and Fujifilm Superia, which is processed using the C-41 process. The chemicals and the color dye couplers on the film may vary depending on the process used to develop the film.

Film speed

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A roll of 400 speed Kodak 35 mm film

Film speed describes a film's threshold sensitivity to light. The international standard for rating film speed is the ISO scale, which combines both the ASA speed and the DIN speed in the format ASA/DIN. Using ISO convention film with an ASA speed of 400 would be labeled 400/27°.[31] A fourth naming standard is GOST, developed by the Russian standards authority. See the film speed article for a table of conversions between ASA, DIN, and GOST film speeds.

Common film speeds include ISO 25, 50, 64, 100, 160, 200, 400, 800, 1600 and 3200. Consumer print films are usually in the ISO 100 to ISO 800 range. Some films, like Kodak's Technical Pan,[32] are not ISO rated and therefore careful examination of the film's properties must be made by the photographer before exposure and development. ISO 25 film is very "slow", as it requires much more exposure to produce a usable image than "fast" ISO 800 film. Films of ISO 800 and greater are thus better suited to low-light situations and action shots (where the short exposure time limits the total light received). The benefit of slower film is that it usually has finer grain and better color rendition than fast film. Professional photographers of static subjects such as portraits or landscapes usually seek these qualities, and therefore require a tripod to stabilize the camera for a longer exposure. A professional photographing subjects such as rapidly moving sports or in low-light conditions will inevitably choose a faster film.

A film with a particular ISO rating can be push-processed, or "pushed", to behave like a film with a higher ISO, by developing for a longer amount of time or at a higher temperature than usual.[33]: 160  More rarely, a film can be "pulled" to behave like a "slower" film. Pushing generally coarsens grain and increases contrast, reducing dynamic range, to the detriment of overall quality. Nevertheless, it can be a useful tradeoff in difficult shooting environments, if the alternative is no usable shot at all.

Special films

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A Polaroid instant photograph

Instant photography, as popularized by Polaroid, uses a special type of camera and film that automates and integrates development, without the need of further equipment or chemicals. This process is carried out immediately after exposure, as opposed to regular film, which is developed afterwards and requires additional chemicals. See instant film.

Films can be made to record non-visible ultraviolet (UV) and infrared (IR) radiation. These films generally require special equipment; for example, most photographic lenses are made of glass and will therefore filter out most ultraviolet light. Instead, expensive lenses made of quartz must be used. Infrared films may be shot in standard cameras using an infrared band- or long-pass filters, although the infrared focal point must be compensated for.

Exposure and focusing are difficult when using UV or IR film with a camera and lens designed for visible light. The ISO standard for film speed only applies to visible light, so visual-spectrum light meters are nearly useless. Film manufacturers can supply suggested equivalent film speeds under different conditions, and recommend heavy bracketing (e.g., "with a certain filter, assume ISO 25 under daylight and ISO 64 under tungsten lighting"). This allows a light meter to be used to estimate an exposure. The focal point for IR is slightly farther away from the camera than visible light, and UV slightly closer; this must be compensated for when focusing. Apochromatic lenses are sometimes recommended due to their improved focusing across the spectrum.

Film optimized for detecting X-ray radiation is commonly used for medical radiography and industrial radiography by placing the subject between the film and a source of X-rays or gamma rays, without a lens, as if a translucent object were imaged by being placed between a light source and standard film. Unlike other types of film, X-ray film has a sensitive emulsion on both sides of the carrier material. This reduces the X-ray exposure for an acceptable image – a desirable feature in medical radiography. The film is usually placed in close contact with phosphor screen(s) and/or thin lead-foil screen(s), the combination having a higher sensitivity to X-rays. Because film is sensitive to x-rays, its contents may be wiped by airport baggage scanners if the film has a speed higher than 800 ISO.[34] This property is exploited in Film badge dosimeters.

Film optimized for detecting X-rays and gamma rays is sometimes used for radiation dosimetry.

Film has a number of disadvantages as a scientific detector: it is difficult to calibrate for photometry, it is not re-usable, it requires careful handling (including temperature and humidity control) for best calibration, and the film must physically be returned to the laboratory and processed. Against this, photographic film can be made with a higher spatial resolution than any other type of imaging detector, and, because of its logarithmic response to light, has a wider dynamic range than most digital detectors. For example, Agfa 10E56 holographic film has a resolution of over 4,000 lines/mm – equivalent to a pixel size of 0.125 micrometers – and an active dynamic range of over five orders of magnitude in brightness, compared to typical scientific CCDs that might have pixels of about 10 micrometers and a dynamic range of 3–4 orders of magnitude.[35][failed verification]

Special films are used for the long exposures required by astrophotography.[36]

Lith films used in the printing industry. In particular when exposed via a ruled-glass screen or contact-screen, halftone images suitable for printing could be generated.

Encoding of metadata

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Some film cameras have the ability to read metadata from the film canister or encode metadata on film negatives.

Negative imprinting

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Negative imprinting is a feature of some film cameras, in which the date, shutter speed and aperture setting are recorded on the negative directly as the film is exposed. The first known version of this process was patented in the United States in 1975, using half-silvered mirrors to direct the readout of a digital clock and mix it with the light rays coming through the main camera lens.[37] Modern SLR cameras use an imprinter fixed to the back of the camera on the film backing plate. It uses a small LED display for illumination and optics to focus the light onto a specific part of the film. The LED display is exposed on the negative at the same time the picture is taken.[38] Digital cameras can often encode all the information in the image file itself. The Exif format is the most commonly used format.

DX codes

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135 Film Cartridge with DX barcode (top) and DX CAS code on the black and white grid below the barcode. The CAS code shows the ISO, number of exposures, exposure latitude (+3/−1 for print film).
DX film edge barcode

In the 1980s, Kodak developed DX Encoding (from Digital indeX), or DX coding, a feature that was eventually adapted by all camera and film manufacturers.[39] DX encoding provides information on both the film cassette and on the film regarding the type of film, number of exposures, speed (ISO/ASA rating) of the film. It consists of three types of identification. First is a barcode near the film opening of the cassette, identifying the manufacturer, film type and processing method (see image below left). This is used by photofinishing equipment during film processing. The second part is a barcode on the edge of the film (see image below right), used also during processing, which indicates the image film type, manufacturer, frame number and synchronizes the position of the frame. The third part of DX coding, known as the DX Camera Auto Sensing (CAS) code, consists of a series of 12 metal contacts on the film cassette, which beginning with cameras manufactured after 1985 could detect the type of film, number of exposures and ISO of the film, and use that information to automatically adjust the camera settings for the speed of the film.[39][40][41]

Common sizes of film

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Source:[42]

Film Designation Film width (mm) Image size (mm) Number of images Reasons
110 16 13 × 17 12/20/24 Single perforations, cartridge loaded
APS/IX240 24 17 × 30 15/25/40

e.g., Kodak "Advantix", different aspect ratios possible, data recorded on magnetic strip, processed film remains in cartridge

126 35 26 × 26 12/20/24 Single perforations, cartridge loaded, e.g., Kodak Instamatic camera
135 35 24 × 36 (1.0 x 1.5 in.) 12–36 Double perforations, cassette loaded, "35 mm film"
127 46 40 x 40 (also 40 x 30 or 60) 8–16 Unperforated, rolled in backing paper.
120 62 45 × 60 16 or 15 Unperforated, rolled in backing paper. For medium format photography
60 × 60 12
60 × 70 10
60 × 90 8
220 62 45 × 60 32 or 31 Same as 120, but rolled with no backing paper, allowing for double the number of images. Unperforated film with leader and trailer.
60 × 60 24
60 × 70 20
60 × 90 16
Sheet film 2 ¼ x 3 ¼ to 20 x 24 in. 1 Individual sheets of film, notched in corner for identification, for large format photography
Disc film 10 × 8 mm 15
Motion picture films 8 mm, 16 mm, 35 mm and 70 mm Double perforations, cassette loaded

History

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The earliest practical photographic process was the daguerreotype; it was introduced in 1839 and did not use film. The light-sensitive chemicals were formed on the surface of a silver-plated copper sheet.[43] The calotype process produced paper negatives.[44] Beginning in the 1850s, thin glass plates coated with photographic emulsion became the standard material for use in the camera. Although fragile and relatively heavy, the glass used for photographic plates was of better optical quality than early transparent plastics and was, at first, less expensive. Glass plates continued to be used long after the introduction of film, and were used for astrophotography[45] and electron micrography until the early 2000s, when they were supplanted by digital recording methods. Ilford continues to manufacture glass plates for special scientific applications.[46]

The first flexible photographic roll film was sold by George Eastman in 1885,[47] but this original "film" was actually a coating on a paper base. As part of the processing, the image-bearing layer was stripped from the paper and attached to a sheet of hardened clear gelatin. The first transparent plastic roll film followed in 1889.[48] It was made from highly flammable cellulose nitrate film.

Although cellulose acetate or "safety film" had been introduced by Kodak in 1908,[49] at first it found only a few special applications as an alternative to the hazardous nitrate film, which had the advantages of being considerably tougher, slightly more transparent, and cheaper. The changeover was completed for X-ray films in 1933, but although safety film was always used for 16 mm and 8 mm home movies, nitrate film remained standard for theatrical 35 mm films until it was finally discontinued in 1951.[50]

Hurter and Driffield began pioneering work on the light sensitivity of photographic emulsions in 1876. Their work enabled the first quantitative measure of film speed to be devised.[51] They developed H&D curves, which are specific for each film and paper. These curves plot the photographic density against the log of the exposure, to determine sensitivity or speed of the emulsion and enabling correct exposure.[12]

Spectral sensitivity

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Early photographic plates and films were usefully sensitive only to blue, violet and ultraviolet light. As a result, the relative tonal values in a scene registered roughly as they would appear if viewed through a piece of deep blue glass. Blue skies with interesting cloud formations photographed as a white blank. Any detail visible in masses of green foliage was due mainly to the colorless surface gloss. Bright yellows and reds appeared nearly black. Most skin tones came out unnaturally dark, and uneven or freckled complexions were exaggerated. Photographers sometimes compensated by adding in skies from separate negatives that had been exposed and processed to optimize the visibility of the clouds, by manually retouching their negatives to adjust problematic tonal values, and by heavily powdering the faces of their portrait sitters.

In 1873, Hermann Wilhelm Vogel discovered that the spectral sensitivity could be extended to green and yellow light by adding very small quantities of certain dyes to the emulsion. The instability of early sensitizing dyes and their tendency to rapidly cause fogging initially confined their use to the laboratory, but in 1883 the first commercially dye-sensitized plates appeared on the market. These early products, described as isochromatic or orthochromatic depending on the manufacturer, made possible a more accurate rendering of colored subject matter into a black-and-white image. Because they were still disproportionately sensitive to blue, the use of a yellow filter and a consequently longer exposure time were required to take full advantage of their extended sensitivity.

In 1894, the Lumière Brothers introduced their Lumière Panchromatic plate, which was made sensitive, although very unequally, to all colors including red. New and improved sensitizing dyes were developed, and in 1902 the much more evenly color-sensitive Perchromo panchromatic plate was being sold by the German manufacturer Perutz. The commercial availability of highly panchromatic black-and-white emulsions also accelerated the progress of practical color photography, which requires good sensitivity to all the colors of the spectrum for the red, green and blue channels of color information to all be captured with reasonable exposure times.

However, all of these were glass-based plate products. Panchromatic emulsions on a film base were not commercially available until the 1910s and did not come into general use until much later. Many photographers who did their own darkroom work preferred to go without the seeming luxury of sensitivity to red – a rare color in nature and uncommon even in human-made objects – rather than be forced to abandon the traditional red darkroom safelight and process their exposed film in complete darkness. Kodak's popular Verichrome black-and-white snapshot film, introduced in 1931, remained a red-insensitive orthochromatic product until 1956, when it was replaced by Verichrome Pan. Amateur darkroom enthusiasts then had to handle the undeveloped film by the sense of touch alone.[52][53]

Introduction to color

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35mm film (top) and APS film (bottom).

Experiments with color photography began almost as early as photography itself, but the three-color principle underlying all practical processes was not set forth until 1855, not demonstrated until 1861, and not generally accepted as "real" color photography until it had become an undeniable commercial reality in the early 20th century. Although color photographs of good quality were being made by the 1890s, they required special equipment, separate and long exposures through three color filters, complex printing or display procedures, and highly specialized skills, so they were then exceedingly rare.

The first practical and commercially successful color "film" was the Lumière Autochrome, a glass plate product introduced in 1907. It was expensive and not sensitive enough for hand-held "snapshot" use. Film-based versions were introduced in the early 1930s and the sensitivity was later improved. These were "mosaic screen" additive color products, which used a simple layer of black-and-white emulsion in combination with a layer of microscopically small color filter elements. The resulting transparencies or "slides" were very dark because the color filter mosaic layer absorbed most of the light passing through. The last films of this type were discontinued in the 1950s, but Polachrome "instant" slide film, introduced in 1983, temporarily revived the technology.

"Color film" in the modern sense of a subtractive color product with a multi-layered emulsion was born with the introduction of Kodachrome for home movies in 1935 and as lengths of 35 mm film for still cameras in 1936; however, it required a complex development process, with multiple dyeing steps as each color layer was processed separately.[54] 1936 also saw the launch of Agfa Color Neu, the first subtractive three-color reversal film for movie and still camera use to incorporate color dye couplers, which could be processed at the same time by a single color developer. The film had some 278 patents.[55] The incorporation of color couplers formed the basis of subsequent color film design, with the Agfa process initially adopted by Ferrania, Fuji and Konica and lasting until the late 70s/early 1980s in the West and 1990s in Eastern Europe. The process used dye-forming chemicals that terminated with sulfonic acid groups and had to be coated one layer at a time. It was a further innovation by Kodak, using dye-forming chemicals which terminated in 'fatty' tails which permitted multiple layers to coated at the same time in a single pass, reducing production time and cost that later became universally adopted along with the Kodak C-41 process.

Despite greater availability of color film after WWII during the next several decades, it remained much more expensive than black-and-white and required much more light, factors which combined with the greater cost of processing and printing delayed its widespread adoption. Decreasing cost, increasing sensitivity and standardized processing gradually overcame these impediments. By the 1970s, color film predominated in the consumer market, while the use of black-and-white film was increasingly confined to photojournalism and fine art photography.

Effect on lens and equipment design

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Photographic lenses and equipment are designed around the film to be used. Although the earliest photographic materials were sensitive only to the blue-violet end of the spectrum, partially color-corrected achromatic lenses were normally used, so that when the photographer brought the visually brightest yellow rays to a sharp focus, the visually dimmest but photographically most active violet rays would be correctly focused, too. The introduction of orthochromatic emulsions required the whole range of colors from yellow to blue to be brought to an adequate focus. Most plates and films described as orthochromatic or isochromatic were practically insensitive to red, so the correct focus of red light was unimportant; a red window could be used to view the frame numbers on the paper backing of roll film, as any red light which leaked around the backing would not fog the film; and red lighting could be used in darkrooms. With the introduction of panchromatic film, the whole visible spectrum needed to be brought to an acceptably sharp focus. In all cases a color cast in the lens glass or faint colored reflections in the image were of no consequence as they would merely change the contrast a little. This was no longer acceptable when using color film. More highly corrected lenses for newer emulsions could be used with older emulsion types, but the converse was not true.

The progression of lens design for later emulsions is of practical importance when considering the use of old lenses, still often used on large-format equipment; a lens designed for orthochromatic film may have visible defects with a color emulsion; a lens for panchromatic film will be better but not as good as later designs.

The filters used were different for the different film types.

Decline

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Film remained the dominant form of photography until the early 21st century, when advances in digital photography drew consumers to digital formats. The first consumer electronic camera, the Sony Mavica was released in 1981, the first digital camera, the Fuji DS-X released in 1989,[56] coupled with advances in software such as Adobe Photoshop which was released in 1989, improvements in consumer level digital color printers and increasingly widespread computers in households during the late 20th century facilitated uptake of digital photography by consumers.[13]

The initial take up of digital cameras in the 1990s was slow due to their high cost and relatively low resolution of the images (compared to 35mm film), but began to make inroads among consumers in the point and shoot market and in professional applications such as sports photography where speed of results including the ability to upload pictures direct from stadia was more critical for newspaper deadlines than resolution. A key difference compared to film was that early digital cameras were soon obsolete, forcing users into a frequent cycle of replacement until the technology began to mature, whereas previously people might have only owned one or two film cameras in their lifetime. Consequently, photographers demanding higher quality in sectors such as weddings, portraiture and fashion where medium format film predominated were the last to switch once resolution began to reach acceptable levels with the advent of 'full frame' sensors, 'digital backs' and medium format digital cameras.

Film camera sales based on CIPA figures peaked in 1998,[57] before declining rapidly after 2000 to reach almost zero by the end of 2005 as consumers switched en masse to digital cameras (sales of which subsequently peaked in 2010). These changes foretold a similar reduction in film sales. Figures for Fujifilm show global film sales, having grown 30% in the preceding five years, peaked around the year 2000. Film sales then began a period of year-on-year falling sales, of increasing magnitude from 2003 to 2008, reaching 30% per annum before slowing. By 2011, sales were less than 10% of the peak volumes.[58] Similar patterns were experienced by other manufacturers, varying by market exposure, with global film sales estimated at 200 million rolls in 1999 declining to only 5 million rolls by 2009.[59] This period wreaked havoc on the film manufacturing industry and its supply chain optimised for high production volumes, plummeting sales saw firms fighting for survival. Agfa-Gevaert's decision to sell off its consumer facing arm (Agfaphoto) in 2004, was followed by a series of bankruptcies of established film manufacturers: Ilford Imaging UK in 2004, Agfaphoto in 2005, Forte in 2007, Foton in 2007, Polaroid in 2001 and 2008, Ferrania in 2009, and Eastman Kodak in 2012 (the latter only surviving after massive downsizing whilst Ilford was rescued by a management buyout). Konica-Minolta closed its film manufacturing business and exited the photographic market entirely in 2006, selling its camera patents to Sony, and Fujifilm successfully moved to rapidly diversify into other markets. The impact of this paradigm shift in technology subsequently rippled though the downstream photo processing and finishing businesses.

Although modern photography is dominated by digital users, film continues to be used by enthusiasts. Film remains the preference of some photographers because of its distinctive "look".[a]

Renewed interest in recent years

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Despite the fact that digital cameras are by far the most commonly used photographic tool and that the selection of available photographic films is much smaller than it once was, sales of photographic film have been on a steady upward trend. Kodak (which was under bankruptcy protection from January 2012 to September 2013) and other companies have noticed this upward trend: Dennis Olbrich, president of the Imaging Paper, Photo Chemicals and Film division at Kodak Alaris, has stated that sales of their photographic films have been growing over the past three or four years. UK-based Ilford have confirmed this trend and conducted extensive research on this subject matter, their research showing that 60% of current film users had only started using film in the past five years and that 30% of current film users were under 35 years old.[62] Annual film sales, which were estimated to reach a low of 5 million rolls in 2009, have since doubled to around 10 million rolls in 2019.[59] A key challenge for the industry is that production relies on the remaining coating facilities that were built for the peak years of demand, but as demand has grown capacity constraints in some of the other process steps which have been downscaled, such as converting film, have caused production bottlenecks for companies such as Kodak.

In 2013 Ferrania, an Italy-based film manufacturer which ceased production of photographic films between the years 2009 and 2010, was acquired by the new Film Ferrania S.R.L taking over a small part of the old company's manufacturing facilities using its former research facility, and re-employed some workers who had been laid off three years earlier when the company stopped production of film. In November of the same year, the company started a crowdfunding campaign with the goal of raising $250,000 to buy tooling and machines from the old factory, with the intention of putting some of the films that had been discontinued back into production, the campaign succeeded and in October 2014 was ended with over $320,000 being raised. In February 2017, Film Ferrania unveiled their "P30" 80 ASA, Panchromatic black and white film, in 35mm format.

Kodak announced on January 5, 2017, that Ektachrome, one of Kodak's most well known transparency films that had been discontinued between 2012 and 2013, would be reformulated and manufactured once again, in 35 mm still and Super 8 motion picture film formats.[63] Following the success of the release, Kodak expanded Ektachrome's format availability by also releasing the film in 120 and 4x5 formats.[64]

Japan-based Fujifilm's instant film "Instax" cameras and paper have also proven to be very successful, and have replaced traditional photographic films as Fujifilm's main film products, while they continue to offer traditional photographic films in various formats and types.[65]

Reusable film

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In 2023, a Finnish chemist Sami Vuori invented a reusable film that uses synthetic hackmanite (Na8Al6Si6O24(Cl,S)2) as the photosensitive medium. The film contains small hackmanite particles that color purple with exposure to ultraviolet radiation (e.g. 254 nm), after which the film is loaded into the camera. Visible light bleaches the hackmanite particles back to white, which gives rise to the formation of a positive image. The film can then be scanned with a typical document scanner and then colored again with UV. If the user wants to spare the image, the film can be put into a dark place, as the bleaching process stops completely in the absence of light.[66]

On top of reusability and not needing any developing or chemicals, another advantage with this type of photochromic film is that it does not need gelatin, which renders it a vegan alternative. However, the main disadvantage is still the film's very slow exposure, requiring hours of exposure time. This means that currently this type of film can be used only in ultra-long-exposure film photography where the subject is e.g. a city center where the photographer wants to fade all movement.[66]

Another reusable film invented by Liou et al. is based on 9-methylacridinium-intercalated clay particles, but erasing the image requires dipping the material in sulfuric acid.[67]

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See also

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Explanatory notes

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References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Photographic film is a light-sensitive medium consisting of a flexible plastic base coated with an emulsion layer containing silver halide crystals suspended in gelatin, used to capture images in analog photography by recording light exposure as a latent image that becomes visible through chemical processing. When light passes through a camera lens and strikes the film, the silver halide crystals react selectively, forming an invisible latent image that is then developed using chemical solutions to reduce exposed crystals to metallic silver, creating a negative image where light areas appear dark and vice versa. This process, which originated from earlier photographic techniques but was revolutionized with flexible roll film, allows for the production of physical prints or transparencies and has been fundamental to still and motion picture photography for over a century. The development of photographic film traces back to the late , building on earlier inventions like the and wet collodion processes that used rigid supports, but the introduction of flexible, transparent in 1889 by and his team at marked a pivotal advancement, enabling portable cameras and widespread amateur use. Initially based on highly flammable cellulose nitrate, film bases transitioned to safer in the 1930s, with color films like emerging in to capture hues through layered emulsions sensitive to red, green, and blue light. By the mid-20th century, standardized formats such as 35mm film dominated consumer and professional photography, supporting both black-and-white and color workflows, though the rise of in the late 20th and early 21st centuries shifted film to a niche role in artistic and archival applications. Key types of photographic film include black-and-white negative film, which produces negatives for printing on paper; color negative film, yielding images with that are printed on color paper to produce positive prints; and color (also known as slide or transparency film), which develops directly into positive images viewable by transmitted light. These films vary in formats, from compact 35mm rolls for standard cameras to larger medium-format (e.g., ) and sheet films (e.g., 4x5 inches) for high-resolution professional work, and are characterized by sensitivity ratings (ISO speeds) that determine their performance in different conditions. Despite the dominance of digital sensors today, photographic film persists due to its unique grain structure, color rendition, and tangible nature, with ongoing production by manufacturers like and catering to enthusiasts and specialized fields such as aerial and scientific imaging.

Fundamentals

Composition and layers

Photographic film is constructed from a multi-layered structure that ensures mechanical stability, light sensitivity, and protection during handling and processing. The foundational layer is the film base, typically made of for modern films due to its durability and dimensional stability, though earlier variants used or the highly flammable cellulose nitrate until the early 1950s. The base provides flexibility and support, with a standard thickness of approximately 0.13 to 0.18 mm for , contributing to the overall gauge that affects curl and ease of handling in cameras and processors. An undercoat or subbing layer, often a thin film, promotes strong bonding between the base and subsequent layers to prevent . The core light-sensitive component is the emulsion layer, a gelatin-based suspension containing silver halide crystals, primarily (AgBr), which provide the film's sensitivity to light through absorption that initiates formation by creating silver atoms. These crystals, typically sized between 0.2 and 2.0 micrometers, are evenly dispersed in the matrix to optimize uniformity and performance, with larger sizes generally associated with higher film speeds. serves as the protective binder, derived from , which adsorbs onto the crystal surfaces to prevent aggregation, supports the crystals mechanically, and allows for swelling during chemical . The emulsion layer is coated to a thickness of about 5 to 10 micrometers on one or both sides of the base. Additional layers enhance optical and protective qualities. An anti-halation layer, usually a dyed undercoat containing light-absorbing pigments like blue or pink dyes, is applied beneath the to minimize internal reflections and reduce halation effects. A protective overcoat, often a thin supercoat, covers the to shield it from abrasion, fingerprints, and environmental damage while maintaining transparency. This layered architecture, with up to several micrometers of total coating thickness, balances sensitivity and durability across various film types.

Exposure and image formation

When light photons strike the crystals in photographic film's , they are absorbed by ions, exciting electrons that migrate to sensitivity sites within the crystal lattice. These electrons attract and reduce silver ions, forming small clusters of metallic silver atoms known as the . Each such speck typically consists of 3 to 10 silver atoms, which serve as development centers but remain invisible until . The total exposure to the film is governed by the , which states that the effective exposure is the product of light intensity and exposure time, such that equal products yield equivalent under normal conditions. However, at extreme intensities—either very low requiring long exposures or very high intensity with short exposures— occurs, leading to reduced sensitivity and potential underexposure. For instance, in low-light scenarios, fewer photons per unit time result in incomplete formation, necessitating compensatory adjustments to exposure time or , highlighting the material's high sensitivity. After exposure, the resulting negative image is characterized by the Hurter-Driffield (H&D) curve, an S-shaped plot of optical density against the logarithm of exposure. The curve's toe region represents low exposures where shadow details accumulate gradually, the straight-line portion captures midtones with linear response, and the shoulder indicates saturation in highlights. The slope of the straight-line section, known as gamma (γ), quantifies the film's contrast, with higher values indicating steeper density changes and greater tonal separation. Unexposed areas exhibit a base-plus-fog density, ideally below 0.1 to minimize unwanted veil and preserve maximum black levels. The remains stable for months under proper storage conditions, such as cool, dry environments, but can fade over time due to thermal migration of silver atoms or environmental factors, potentially shifting effective by up to one stop after several weeks. Sensitizing dyes incorporated into the extend the of crystals beyond the blue-violet range, enabling response to and light while aiding in efficient trapping to support formation.

Types and Characteristics

Film speed and sensitivity

Film speed, also known as sensitivity, quantifies a photographic film's response to , enabling photographers to select appropriate emulsions for varying conditions. Standardized ratings originated with the American Standards Association (ASA) system introduced in 1943, which used an arithmetic scale where doubling the sensitivity doubles the numerical value—for instance, ASA 100 film requires half the exposure of ASA 50 film to achieve the same . In parallel, the German (DIN) system, established in 1934, employed a , where an increase of 3 degrees doubles the sensitivity; thus, DIN 21° corresponds approximately to ASA 100, DIN 24° to ASA 200, and DIN 27° to ASA 400. These systems were unified in 1974 under the (ISO), creating the ISO speed rating that combines both scales (e.g., ISO 100/21°), with the current standard for black-and-white negative films outlined in ISO 6:1993. The ISO speed is determined through sensitometric testing, measuring the minimum exposure required to produce a of 0.1 above the base plus level in the midtone region of the characteristic curve, typically under controlled daylight-balanced illumination (around 5500K). For films balanced to illumination (around 3200K), the effective speed may differ due to mismatches, often requiring adjustments or filters to maintain accurate exposure; reciprocity characteristics also vary, with tungsten-balanced films exhibiting slightly different failure rates in long exposures compared to daylight types. This measurement ensures consistency across manufacturers, prioritizing a practical balance between shadow detail and overall image rather than absolute quantum efficiency. Higher film speeds, such as ISO 400 and above, enhance light sensitivity by incorporating larger crystals, which capture photons more efficiently but introduce visible iness and reduce overall sharpness. This trade-off is evident in modulation transfer function (MTF) curves, where faster films show steeper drop-offs at higher spatial frequencies, limiting fine detail resolution compared to slower emulsions like ISO 100; for example, ISO 400 films typically exhibit coarser structure, impacting perceived in enlargements. Photographers must weigh these compromises, as ultra-high-speed films—such as those rated ISO 3200 or pushed equivalents—enable handheld shooting in low light, including , but at the expense of increased noise-like and diminished highlight . To extend effective speed beyond the manufacturer's rating, techniques like involve underexposing the film (e.g., rating ISO 400 film at ISO 800 for one stop gain) followed by extended development time, typically yielding 1-2 additional stops of sensitivity. This overdevelopment amplifies contrast by enhancing density in shadows and midtones, while in color films, it often induces shifts toward warmer tones, such as reddish-yellow casts due to differential layer responses in the red and green emulsions. Conversely, pull processing overexposes and shortens development to reduce contrast, preserving finer but sacrificing shadow detail; these methods demand precise control to avoid excessive fog or blocked highlights.

Monochrome versus color films

Monochrome films utilize a single layer sensitive to a broad spectrum of , where exposure forms a in crystals that, upon development, produces metallic silver densities directly corresponding to the intensities received. This results in a negative on the film, with denser silver deposits in shadowed areas and sparser in highlights, allowing for a wide tonal range that can be adjusted during printing. Positive prints are created by contact or enlargement onto , where the negative is projected to form a reversed ; contrast and tonal rendition are controlled through grading systems, typically ranging from grade 0 (low contrast, soft tones for high-key scenes) to grade 5 (high contrast, hard tones for dramatic effects). A representative example is HP5 Plus, a panchromatically sensitized film rated at ISO 400, known for its fine grain, medium contrast, and broad exposure latitude exceeding 12 stops, making it suitable for varied lighting conditions in and action . In contrast, color negative films employ the and feature multilayer emulsions—typically three superimposed layers sensitive to blue, green, and red light—each containing crystals paired with color couplers that remain inactive until development. During chromogenic development, oxidized developer reacts with these couplers to form subtractive dyes: dyes in the blue-sensitive layer to block excess blue light, in the green-sensitive layer to block green, and in the red-sensitive layer to block red, creating a negative image where colors and tones are inverted. This dye-based reproduction provides a of approximately 8-10 stops, forgiving minor exposure errors but introducing potential color shifts if pushed beyond limits. Color reversal films, processed via the E-6 method, produce transparent positive slides directly on the base, starting with a black-and-white first development that forms a negative silver image across all layers, followed by uniform fogging exposure to render unexposed areas developable. A subsequent color development couples dyes in the fogged regions while the initial silver image remains; the silver is then bleached away, leaving only the positive dye image unmasked for projection or scanning, yielding higher contrast, enhanced saturation, and vivid colors but with a narrower latitude of about 5-6 stops compared to negatives. An iconic example was Kodachrome, discontinued in 2009, which employed a specialized chromogenic reversal process with in situ coupler formation during multiple development stages, including a bleach step, to achieve exceptionally vivid and stable colors renowned for their archival quality. To compensate for spectral imbalances in dye absorption—where cyan dyes may absorb too much blue or magenta too much red—color negative films incorporate an orange mask formed by colored couplers that add a uniform density, which is subtracted during printing or scanning to correct unwanted color casts. Interimage effects further refine reproduction by modulating dye formation across layers; for instance, excess exposure in one layer can inhibit development in others via mobile inhibitors, enhancing color accuracy and reducing crosstalk in subtractive systems. These mechanisms contribute to the typical 8-10 stop latitude in color negatives, narrower than the 12+ stops in monochrome due to the constraints of multilayer dye interactions and masking.

Special-purpose films

Special-purpose films are engineered for applications beyond general photography, featuring tailored sensitivities, emulsion structures, or processing methods to meet specific technical demands such as extended wavelength response, rapid development, or enhanced contrast in controlled environments. Infrared films extend sensitivity into the near-infrared spectrum, typically 700-900 nm, enabling false-color imaging that differentiates vegetation, water, and urban features in landscapes or aerial surveys. These films require orange or red filters to block visible light and prevent overexposure from shorter wavelengths. Kodak Aerochrome, developed in the 1940s for military camouflage detection during World War II, exemplifies this type, producing vibrant cyan skies and magenta foliage in processed transparencies; production ceased in 2009 due to declining demand. High-speed films, rated at ISO 3200 or higher, facilitate in low-light conditions or fast-action scenarios like indoor sports or night street scenes, where shutter speeds must remain high to minimize blur. Professional T-MAX P3200 employs T-grain technology, which consists of tabular crystals that yield finer grain and sharper images compared to traditional cubic-grain films at equivalent speeds. This structure also mitigates reciprocity failure, allowing accurate exposures during extended developments without significant loss in effective speed. Instant films integrate development chemistry within the film pack, producing a finished positive print moments after exposure through diffusion transfer processes. The system, introduced in 1972, uses an internal dye diffusion transfer method where unexposed dyes migrate from the negative to the positive receiver sheet, forming a full-color image in approximately 60 seconds without manual intervention or peeling. This self-contained unit eliminated the need for separate processing pods in earlier Polaroid designs, simplifying on-site instant for portraits and documentation. Medical and films prioritize and detail for diagnostic , often featuring double-emulsion coatings on both sides of a base to amplify exposure efficiency when paired with intensifying screens. Blue-sensitive variants respond primarily to and blue light emitted by calcium screens in traditional , while green-sensitive films match rare-earth screens that emit green wavelengths for reduced dosage and sharper results in computed setups. These films undergo wet processing to reveal latent images from X-ray attenuation through patient tissues. Aerial films, such as Kodak's Aerochrome series or T-MAX variants adapted for , incorporate extended red sensitivity and thin bases for high-altitude mapping, capturing fine details in and from . Cine films like 16mm , launched in , provided vibrant color reversal for motion picture production, supporting amateur and professional filmmaking with daylight-balanced emulsions that delivered archival stability over decades.

Formats and Encoding

Standard sizes and formats

Photographic film standards define the physical dimensions and aspect ratios of the image area, ensuring compatibility with camera mechanisms and enabling consistent processing and printing. These formats range from compact subminiature rolls to expansive sheet films, each suited to specific photographic needs such as portability, resolution, or enlargement potential. The 35mm format, the most widely used for consumer still photography, employs a frame size of 24 mm × 36 mm and is supplied in 135 cartridges that typically yield 36 exposures per roll. This standard derives from the 35mm motion picture film established in 1913, when developed the first practical still camera prototype using at Leica. Medium format films, particularly the 120 roll type, provide larger image areas for enhanced detail and are available in common frame sizes of 6×6 cm (square), 6×7 cm (rectangular), and 6×9 cm, offering up to 16 exposures on a standard roll depending on the format. A 220 variant doubles the film length for approximately twice the exposures without increasing the spool size. Large format photography utilizes individual cut sheets of film, with standard sizes including 4×5 inches and 8×10 inches, which are manually loaded into double-sided holders for use in . Unlike roll films, these sheets lack spools and allow precise control over orientation and adjustments in the camera back. Typical aspect ratios vary by format, with 35mm adhering to 3:2 for a rectangular composition akin to 35mm full-frame digital sensors, while some options like 6×6 cm employ a 1:1 square ratio for symmetrical framing. Subminiature formats, such as the 110 cartridge introduced in 1972, discontinued by major manufacturers in 2009 but revived by Lomography since 2012 and available as of 2025, use 16 mm wide film for pocket-sized cameras, producing smaller frames half the area of 35mm. The Advanced Photo System (APS), launched in 1996, featured variable frame sizes including approximately 24×17 mm for its classic mode within the IX240 cartridge, supporting 25 or 40 exposures and multiple aspect ratios via magnetic encoding, though production ceased around 2011 due to limited adoption.
FormatFrame SizeCartridge/LoadingTypical ExposuresAspect Ratio
35mm24 × 36 mm135 cartridge363:2
Medium (120)6×6 cm, 6×7 cm, 6×9 cmRoll spool12–161:1 (6×6), others rectangular
Large4×5 in, 8×10 inSheet holders1 per sheetVariable (often 4:5 or 5:4)
110 (subminiature)~13 × 17 mm110 cartridge24–36~3:4
APS24 × 17 mm (classic)IX240 cartridge25 or 40Variable (H: ~16:9, C: ~3:2, P: ~3:1)

Cartridge systems and loading

Photographic film cartridges and rolls are designed to protect the light-sensitive from exposure during loading, transport, and advancement in cameras, with mechanisms ensuring light-tight conditions and precise film movement. The standard 35mm cassette consists of a or metal shell enclosing a spool, incorporating a felt or light trap—a lining the entry slot—to block ambient light while allowing the film leader to pass through. This design enables daylight loading, as the protruding leader is pulled into the camera's take-up spool, often auto-threading in single-lens reflex (SLR) models where the mechanism grips and advances the film automatically. Early cassettes, particularly pre-1960s models, were reversible and reloadable, permitting users to load custom lengths in a or changing bag, whereas modern versions are factory-preloaded and non-reusable to simplify consumer use and prevent fogging. For , 120 and rolls feature paper-backed film wound on a simple spool, requiring manual loading in the camera's film chamber or holder, often constructed from in designs for durability and light-tight seals. The spool includes flanges to maintain even tension during winding, preventing slack that could cause uneven exposure or frame misalignment, with the opaque backing serving as both and a frame-numbering indicator visible through a red window. The variant doubles the length by omitting the backing , reducing bulk while relying on the camera's plate for flatness. Bulk loading allows photographers to cut custom lengths from 100-foot (approximately 30-meter) spools of unperforated or perforated , using light-tight changers or loaders that eliminate the need for a by enabling safe transfer in ambient light. These devices typically accommodate a bulk roll on a supply spindle and empty cassettes or take-up spools, metering via counters to produce rolls of desired exposure counts, such as 36 frames for 35mm. Specialized cartridge systems include the , introduced by in 1963 and discontinued by them in 1988, with new production by the Film Photography Project starting in 2024, which uses a drop-in plastic cartridge with 35mm-wide film on a paper backing, advancing fixed 28×28 mm square frames via a single per frame for foolproof alignment without threading. Similarly, the 110 pocket format employs a compact cartridge with a lipped spool design to secure the narrower 16mm film, facilitating easy loading in subminiature cameras while maintaining light-tight integrity through molded seals.

Metadata and coding systems

Photographic film employs various metadata and coding systems to embed essential information such as sensitivity, exposure count, and temporal data directly onto the film strip or cartridge, facilitating automated handling by cameras, processors, and laboratories. These systems enhance efficiency in exposure settings, processing alignment, and print indexing without manual intervention. DX coding, introduced by Kodak in March 1983 and subsequently adopted by Fuji and other manufacturers, is an optical encoding standard applied to 35mm film cassettes. It consists of a pattern of two rows of six conductive and non-conductive zones printed on the cassette's exterior, where the upper row encodes the film's ISO speed across a range from 25 to 50000 using binary configuration, while the lower row indicates the number of exposures (typically 12, 20, 24, or 36) and exposure latitude. Cameras equipped with DX readers use electrical contacts to detect the pattern's conductivity, automatically setting the appropriate ISO and exposure counter. This system also correlates with edge markings on the processed film for laboratory identification of film type and emulsion characteristics. Negative imprinting provides temporal metadata by exposing date and time directly onto the film's edge during image capture. Common in consumer 35mm cameras from the 1980s onward, this feature uses a small LED array or incandescent light source to project numeric characters (e.g., in "YY-MM-DD" or "MM/DD/YY" formats like "87-11-08") onto the film margin just outside the image area. The imprinting mechanism is synchronized with the shutter release and powered by a built-in quartz crystal clock for precise timing, ensuring accuracy within seconds over extended periods without frequent recalibration. This data aids in organizing prints and verifying chronology during post-processing, though it requires complementary red or orange wavelengths to minimize fogging of the light-sensitive . Advanced Photo System (APS) film incorporates barcodes and magnetic tracks for more comprehensive data storage via the Information Exchange (IX) system. APS cassettes feature an optical DX/IX barcode on the exterior for initial ISO and capacity reading, similar to standard 35mm DX coding. The film's transparent magnetic layer, applied across the entire strip, serves as a rewritable data track where cameras record per-frame details such as print format (classic 4:3, H 16:9, or P panoramic), exposure number, date, time, title, and scene conditions (e.g., lighting type). Photofinishing equipment reads and writes to this IX strip for automated indexing, optimizing print quality and generating index sheets with thumbnails. Introduced by Kodak in the mid-1990s, this magnetic encoding enables seamless communication between devices, reducing errors in consumer workflows. Frame numbering systems pre-print sequential identifiers along the film's edge, adjacent to the sprocket holes, to support precise alignment during laboratory processing and . These latent numbers, typically exposed during manufacturing using safe LED illumination to avoid sensitizing the , appear as numeric sequences (e.g., 1-36) interspersed with manufacturer codes and identifiers. The ensures visibility under safelights without unintended exposure, while the positioning relative to sprocket holes allows mechanical or automated readers to register frames accurately for cropping, splicing, or enlargement. This metadata is crucial for matching negatives to contact sheets and maintaining order in bulk processing.

Historical Evolution

Early developments and spectral advancements

The origins of photographic film trace back to early 19th-century processes that laid the groundwork for light-sensitive emulsions, beginning with the introduced by Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre in 1839. This process involved polishing a silver-plated copper sheet to a mirror finish, sensitizing it with iodine vapor to form light-sensitive , and developing the using heated mercury vapor, which amalgamated with exposed silver to create a visible positive image. Each produced a unique, non-reproducible image on the metal plate, limiting its use for multiple prints but establishing the principle of chemical image formation through silver halides. These early plates were highly sensitive only to blue and light, rendering skies and blue-toned elements unnaturally light or white in outdoor scenes due to overexposure of the dominant blue wavelengths. In 1841, William Henry Fox Talbot patented the process, introducing paper negatives coated with in a salted albumen or , which allowed for the creation of multiple positive prints from a single negative. This marked a significant advancement over the by enabling reproduction, though the paper base resulted in lower resolution and required careful handling to avoid damage during . Like the , calotypes were primarily sensitive to blue and UV light, perpetuating issues with spectral imbalance in natural scenes. The wet plate process, invented by Frederick Scott Archer in , represented a major step toward modern film by using a solution of (collodion) dissolved in and alcohol, iodized with , and poured onto a plate to form a light-sensitive of silver halides. This wet collodion negative produced sharper images suitable for portraits and landscapes, but the plate had to be exposed and developed while the remained wet, necessitating portable darkrooms and on-site processing that constrained fieldwork. remained limited to blue and green wavelengths, causing red objects to appear dark and skies to wash out as white. A breakthrough came in 1871 when Richard Leach Maddox developed the gelatin dry plate, suspending silver bromide crystals in a emulsion coated onto glass, which could be dried and stored for later use, eliminating the need for immediate development. This innovation, refined through the , dramatically shortened exposure times to seconds and enabled the first handheld cameras, as photographers no longer required cumbersome in the field. Early emulsions were orthochromatic, extended to sensitivity around 1873 by adding dyes, but still insensitive to light, resulting in distorted tonal where flesh tones appeared overly dark and blue skies rendered as featureless white. Spectral advancements accelerated in the early 1900s with the introduction of panchromatic films, which incorporated organic dyes to broaden sensitivity across the full from approximately 400 to 700 nm, capturing balanced tones for red, green, and blue light akin to human vision. Eastman Kodak, founded in 1888 to commercialize , introduced panchromatic films in the 1920s, providing natural color rendition that corrected orthochromatic limitations like white skies and unnatural skin tones. Kodak's earlier milestone in 1889 was the introduction of the first flexible on a paper base coated with gelatin emulsion, which could be stripped away after processing to reveal a transparent negative, paving the way for portable roll-film systems. Film sensitivity quantification evolved alongside these developments, with the Scheiner speed system devised by Julius Scheiner in 1894 measuring emulsion responsiveness logarithmically in "degrees Scheiner," where each degree doubling represented a sensitivity increase, serving as a precursor to modern ISO equivalents. This standardized testing allowed manufacturers to rate films consistently, facilitating the transition from slow glass plates (around 4-8 Scheiner degrees, equivalent to ISO 1-3) to faster emulsions that supported snapshot photography.

Color film introduction and refinements

The introduction of color photographic film marked a significant advancement from processes, enabling the capture and reproduction of natural hues through innovative chemical and structural designs. Early efforts focused on methods, where light filters created color via superposition. The brothers' Autochrome process, patented in 1903 and commercially available from 1907, represented the first practical color film. It consisted of a glass plate coated with microscopic grains dyed in red, green, and blue-violet, forming a filter layer over a panchromatic ; exposure through this screen and subsequent processing produced a positive image viewed by transmitted light. This additive system was notably slow, requiring bright sunlight and exposures of several seconds to minutes, limiting its use to static subjects. The transition to processes in revolutionized color film by integrating multiple layers sensitive to different wavelengths, allowing dyes to form directly within the film structure for more efficient reproduction. Agfa's , introduced in 1936, pioneered the integral tripack format—a single strip with three superimposed layers, each containing color-sensitive silver halides and couplers that generated , , and yellow dyes upon development. This multilayer approach eliminated the need for separate filters or plates, simplifying production and handling. followed with in 1935, the first successful 35mm color slide film, producing vibrant transparencies for projection or . Unlike later films, 's lacked built-in dye couplers, which were instead incorporated during its complex K-14 development , resulting in exceptional color and archival stability but requiring specialized handling. The 1940s saw the rise of color negative films, expanding accessibility for print-making among amateurs. Kodak's Kodacolor, launched in 1942, was the first multilayer color negative film designed for snapshot printing, featuring integral color masks in each layer to compensate for impurities in the dyes, ensuring accurate when printed onto positive paper. Complementing this, Kodak introduced in 1946 as a with built-in couplers, enabling simpler in-house processing compared to Kodachrome's re-exposure steps and thus appealing to professionals and hobbyists alike. These developments shifted toward subtractive chemistry, where unexposed silver halides were removed to leave dye images in . Subsequent refinements enhanced film performance, addressing grain, speed, and color rendition. In 1976, Kodak introduced T-grain emulsions—tabular crystals that increased light sensitivity while reducing visible grain, allowing finer detail in color negatives and slides without sacrificing sharpness. Fujifilm's Velvia, released in 1990, exemplified specialized optimization with its high-saturation dyes and fine grain, becoming a staple for photographers seeking vivid greens and under natural light. Processing standardization further democratized color film; Kodak's , established in 1972, streamlined development of color negatives with a single-bath color developer, bleach-fix, and stabilizer, making it feasible for home or small-lab use and replacing the more finicky C-22 system. However, the intricate K-14 requirements for proved unsustainable amid declining demand, leading Kodak to discontinue the film in 2009, ending an era of proprietary reversal processing.

Influence on equipment design

The introduction of panchromatic films, which extended sensitivity across the , necessitated advancements in lens design to minimize unwanted reflections and that could degrade color fidelity. In the 1930s, pioneered multi-layer anti-reflection coatings, patented by Alexander Smakula in , which significantly improved light transmission and contrast for these films by reducing surface reflections from approximately 5% to under 1% per surface. These coatings became standard in high-end optics, enabling photographers to exploit the full of panchromatic emulsions without veiling glare compromising image quality. Film sensitivity advancements, particularly the development of faster emulsions in the early , drove innovations in shutter mechanisms to control exposure duration precisely and prevent motion blur. By the 1920s, focal-plane shutters in cameras like the Leica I achieved speeds up to 1/500 second, later extending to 1/1000 second in models such as the Leica II, allowing with high-speed films rated around ISO 100 or higher under bright conditions. Focal-plane designs excelled at these rapid speeds but limited flash to slower settings due to the traveling slit exposure, prompting the parallel evolution of leaf shutters in medium-format cameras, which permitted full flash sync at all speeds up to 1/500 second, ideal for portrait work with slower films. To accommodate varying film speeds and formats, viewfinder and metering systems integrated directly with camera bodies for accurate exposure assessment and composition. The Leica III series, introduced in 1935 and refined by 1938, featured coupled that aligned with film advance mechanisms, while early built-in exposure meters in subsequent models like the (1950) calibrated directly to ASA film speed ratings, simplifying settings for emulsions from ISO 10 to 800. correction mechanisms, such as projected frame lines in rangefinder , became essential for on smaller formats like 35mm, adjusting the viewed frame to match the film's actual capture area and reducing compositional errors. Film formats themselves dictated specialized equipment to handle loading, tensioning, and image alignment. The 120 roll film's medium-format size spurred the creation of twin-lens reflex (TLR) cameras, exemplified by the 1929 , which used a dedicated viewing lens above the taking lens to provide waist-level composition without interrupting film transport, supporting 6x6 cm frames on a single roll. For sheet films in large formats like 4x5 or 8x10 inches, bellows constructions in view cameras allowed extensive front and rear movements—such as rise, fall, and swing—for perspective control and focus, essential for the precise flatness required by individual film sheets loaded in dark slides. The 1925 launch of the Leica I rangefinder camera catalyzed a boom in 35mm photography, influencing compact designs from competitors like Canon and , as its use of perforated cinema film enabled lightweight, high-capacity bodies that prioritized portability for . Later, the 1996 (APS) format integrated magnetic strips on film cassettes, requiring cameras from , Canon, and Nikon to incorporate data readers that automatically set exposure parameters, frame counters, and print formats based on encoded and orientation data. Following the digital transition around 2000, production of film-specific tools like dedicated darkroom enlargers and mechanical film loaders declined sharply, with major manufacturers such as Nikon ceasing most 35mm SLR development by 2006 as sensor-based systems rendered format-dependent mechanics obsolete.

Decline and digital transition

The rise of digital cameras in the early 1990s marked the beginning of photographic film's decline, as electronic imaging offered immediate results without the recurring costs of film and . Kodak's Professional DCS, introduced in 1991, was the first commercially available , featuring a 1.3-megapixel CCD sensor integrated into a body and priced at around $20,000–$25,000, initially targeting professional users in fields like and advertising. By the mid-2000s, advancements in CCD and sensor technology had improved digital image quality, with cameras achieving 12-megapixel resolutions that began to rival or exceed the effective resolution of 35mm film stocks, particularly in terms of sharpness and low-light performance, though early digital sensors suffered from higher noise levels compared to film's characteristic . The widespread adoption of digital photography accelerated with consumer devices, notably the 2007 launch of the , which integrated a 2-megapixel camera into a , enabling instant capture and sharing without expenses and democratizing high-volume imaging for everyday users. This shift imposed severe economic pressures on the industry; for instance, Eastman filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2012, largely due to the collapse of its -based revenue model as digital alternatives eroded 90% of global sales between 2000 and 2010. Major manufacturers responded by curtailing production, exemplified by Fujifilm's 2018 discontinuation of several lines, including multi-packs of transparency films like Velvia, amid plummeting demand. Consumer behavior reflected this transition, with disposable cameras—once a booming segment peaking in the 1990s with over 89 million units sold annually in alone—experiencing a sharp decline as digital point-and-shoots and smartphones offered similar convenience without processing fees. Professional photographers increasingly adopted digital workflows in the late 1990s and early 2000s for faster and cost savings, with sales surpassing film by 2003 and becoming the industry standard by the mid-2000s. A poignant milestone was the 2009 closure of Kodak's , plant, which housed the last U.S. operations for producing Kodacolor negative film, signaling the end of large-scale domestic film .

Modern Developments

Revival of analog photography

Since the early , has experienced a notable resurgence among hobbyists, artists, and younger generations, countering the earlier dominance of . This revival is fueled by a desire for the unique aesthetic qualities of , such as , color shifts, and imperfections that digital post-processing often emulates but cannot fully replicate. Cultural drivers include the popularity of Instagram filters that mimic film looks, prompting users to seek authentic analog results for greater tangibility and creativity. This trend parallels the nostalgia-driven revival of vinyl records, where enthusiasts value the tactile, ritualistic experience of analog media amid a digital-saturated world. Market trends reflect this enthusiasm, with 35mm film sales growing approximately 18% year-over-year by 2023, contributing to a global 35mm film market valued at around $250 million. Companies like Lomography have capitalized on this by offering creative films suited for cross-processing, which intentionally develops one film type in chemicals meant for another to produce vibrant, unpredictable colors. New products have further supported the revival, including film stocks like , which repurposes recycled motion picture emulsions for still photography to deliver cinematic effects. Fujifilm's Instax line, such as the Mini Evo hybrid camera, combines digital capture with printing, appealing to users blending old and new workflows. Communities have flourished online and offline, with forums like r/analog (over 2 million members) and its sister subreddit r/AnalogCommunity serving as hubs for sharing techniques and critiques. Festivals and publications, such as Analog Forever Magazine's annual exhibitions and print issues, showcase analog work and foster global connections. Art schools have increasingly incorporated analog processes into curricula to teach conceptual depth and hands-on skills. Specific milestones include Kodak Alaris's 2017 revival of film, responding to rising demand and marking a commitment to classic stocks. The have seen a peak in adoption, particularly among Gen Z, with 68% of young hobbyists actively using film cameras for their authentic, mindful approach. As of 2024, the broader photographic film market was valued at approximately $2.7–3.2 billion, underscoring the sustained economic viability of this niche.

Reusable and sustainable films

In the context of analog photography's revival, reloadable cassettes have seen renewed interest as a means to minimize from single-use cartridges. Designs originating in the , such as the Watson bulk film loader, enable photographers to spool bulk rolls of film into reusable 35mm cassettes in a light-tight environment, thereby reducing the need for disposable packaging and cutting down on generation. These systems, often paired with durable metal or high-quality cassettes, allow for multiple reuses, promoting a more circular approach to film handling compared to traditional pre-loaded rolls. Contemporary initiatives, like Ilford's 2021 launch of the Sprite 35-II reusable 35mm film camera, further support this trend by encouraging users to reload empty cassettes with fresh , extending the lifecycle of both the camera and the loading process. For high-volume shooters, such reusable systems can reduce film costs by up to 50% through bulk purchasing and reloading, making analog practice more accessible amid rising material prices. Sustainability efforts by major manufacturers also address environmental concerns in film production. emphasizes recycling programs for film bases and silver recovery, with initiatives to incorporate post-consumer materials into packaging and processes, though specific recycled content in film itself remains limited. has transitioned to plant-based, plastic-free paper wrappers for its photographic products, reducing reliance on petroleum-derived materials and lowering the of distribution. Experimental advancements explore reusable emulsions and recyclable bases to further enhance sustainability. Researchers have investigated polymer-based, silverless alternatives, such as bio-based films, which offer potential for degradable or recyclable substrates without traditional silver halides, though these remain in early development stages primarily for alternative processes. Despite these innovations, drawbacks persist: reused cassettes carry risks of contamination from residual chemicals or light leaks if not maintained properly, and commercially available sustainable options lag behind single-use films in widespread accessibility and performance consistency.

Current production and availability

In 2025, the major manufacturers of photographic film remain Alaris in the United States, which produces popular color negative films such as and Portra for consumer and professional use. in continues to offer color films like Fujicolor 200 and limited stocks of Superia lines, with some repurposing of expired inventory to meet niche demand. , owned by Harman Technology in the , specializes in black-and-white emulsions including HP5 Plus and FP4 Plus. Production is concentrated in a limited number of global facilities, with remnants of Kodak's operations in , handling color film output for the . Harman's plant in , , produces both films and select products like Acros. maintains its primary site in Kanagawa, , while smaller-scale operations, such as those for 4×5 sheet films, occur in niche facilities worldwide. Film availability has stabilized, with online retailers like and stocking a wide array of classic s from these manufacturers, covering approximately 80% of legacy types. Supply shortages that plagued the industry from 2021 to 2023 due to post-COVID disruptions in and have largely resolved by 2025, enabling consistent global access. Pricing for a standard 35mm roll of color or black-and-white film typically ranges from $10 to $20, depending on the emulsion and retailer. Niche or specialty films often cost twice as much, exacerbated by import duties in regions like the and Asia that add 10-20% to final prices. Global annual output of photographic film rolls exceeded 20 million in 2023, more than tripling from approximately 7 million in 2015, driven by renewed analog interest. New entrants like France-based contribute handmade and repurposed specialty films, expanding options beyond traditional lines. In 2025, new film introductions included Lucky Film's affordable color negative stock expected in Q2 and developments in Harman's Phoenix color film, further diversifying availability. Notable discontinued brands include Agfa, which ceased consumer film production in 2005 amid industry consolidation.

References

  1. https://camera-wiki.org/wiki/35mm_film
  2. https://camera-wiki.org/wiki/Film_speed
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