Limited Offer: we have sourced an incredible deal for you on fresh Kodak UltraMax 35mm film!*
The films themselves have expiry dates of 05/28 (no guarantees on expiry date given), straight from the factory, with no impact to the emulsion. However Kodak are giving us a special discount on these rolls so we wanted to pass that on! The films themselves are untouched, but they will arrive in plastic canisters.
We are selling them in bundles of 5 to keep it simple for our warehouse team. Limited volume for obvious reasons so when they're gone they're gone
*Cross-out price calculated from buying 5 single rolls of Kodak UltraMax 36exp 35mm from our store. That's a saving of £24.75 and giving your Kodak UltraMax 36exp at only £9 per roll!
Kodak Gold 35mm film is a colour negative film, seen as more sensitive than Kodak Gold but with similar value-for-money, reliable colour and tone reproduction will ensure your special moments are captured and stored forever. Shoot in daylight, clouds, and indoors with a flash! Ultramax; ultrafun.
Features:
- ISO 400 Speed Film
- High Colour Saturation and Colour Accuracy
- Vibrant Colours
- Wonderful Sharpness for the Price
- Wide Exposure Latitude
Benefits:
- Take high quality photos with beautiful colours under any lighting conditions
- Captures even subtle shades for accurate representations of real life scenes
- Fine grain structure ensures smooth texture in prints or digital scans
Specification
| Format: |
35mm |
| Colour: |
Colour |
| Type: |
Negative |
| ISO: |
400 |
| Exposures: |
36 |
| Pack size: |
5 |
To understand more about the details above you can check out our film guide or if you want some inspiration then head over to our page on choosing your next 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.
You can read more about Kodak's history here: "The Rise and Fall of Kodak Film"