Kodak Ultramax 35mm film is a versatile colour negative film suitable for a variety of photography situations. It offers vivid, accurate colours and sharp, fine imagery. Its wide exposure latitude allows for capturing vibrant colours in daylight, and beautiful portrait shots too.
Colour-balanced for smooth skin tones and natural hues, it delivers bright blues, greens and reds out of the box – perfect for all kinds of photography; from portraits to action scenes.
Features:
- Vivid & Accurate Color - Wide Exposure Latitude - Smooth Skin Tones - Natural Hues - Bright Blues, Greens & Reds
Benefits:
- Capture amazing outdoor photos with vivid colour contrast, accurate colour reproduction and sharp images - Achieve excellent results indoors without needing special lighting conditions or professional equipment - Enjoy the convenience of one multi-purpose film that meets most photographic needs - Uniquely balanced colours ensure attention grabbing results regardless of lighting conditions
Video Review
Specification
Format:
35mm
Colour:
Colour
Type:
Negative
ISO:
400
Exposures:
36 / 24
Pack size:
1 / 3
Sample shots (c) Joseph H. Robert L. Ben R. Jack and Nigel B.
1. How many photos do you get on a roll of Kodak Ultramax 35mm film?
There are two different options for Kodak Ultramax - you can choose between a 36 exposure roll or a 24 exposure roll. The smaller roll is usually slightly cheaper, but the larger roll is usually more cost-efficient per photo - especially when you take into account the fixed development costs
2. What is the ISO of Kodak Ultramax 35mm film?
Ultramax 35mm film has an ISO of 400. This means that it can cope with all of the most common lighting situations, and is known as a mid-speed film.
About Kodak
Kodak - properly known as Kodak Eastman - was founded in America in 1888 and dominated the "Western" world of photography for the next 100 years, constantly in fierce rivalry with the Japanese Fuji. Similarly to Fuji the advent of digital photography at the turn of the century caused significant financial problems. A late attempt to win in the compact market was hit by the rise of mobile photography and bankruptcy followed in 2012. Fortunately the photography business has survived under the Kodak Alaris name - based in Hertfordshire, England - and they have delighted the analogue industry by pledging continued support for film production and the promise of bringing back old favourite emulsions.
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I think it’s more for street photography than people
K
K.T (Eastbourne, GB)
Perfect for:Beginners, Street Photography, Travel
Cool tone film
I think max 400 give the cold tone vibe more than warm tone.
K
K.T (Eastbourne, GB)
Perfect for:Great All-Rounder, Beginners, Travel
Max400
It’s my first time to use max 400 and colour seems greyish than gold 200
J
Juno R. (Bracknell, GB)
Perfect for:Beginners
Accreditation Handles:@juno_on_film
Not a fan
It’s an okay film, but I just can’t seem to get it to work for me… I did get one nice shot from it though so not all bad!
A
Adam S. (Hailsham, GB)
Perfect for:Great All-Rounder, Beginners, Landscapes, Street Photography, Creative/Abstract, Travel
Ultramax is great!
A medium speed, consumer grade offering from Koadk.
It is a wonderful film in the right light.
It is nice and affordable (better than portra in that regard) and plenty sharp for all reasonable 35mm shots, so get out there and shoot it!