Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Photography
  3. News

Kodak shows off the first test photos shot on its new Ektachrome film

Add as a preferred source on Google

Five years after ditching its Ektachrome 100 film, Kodak is making final preparations for its relaunch.

The iconic photography company has been working on the production of Ektachrome for more than a year, and has just shown off some of the first images shot with it.

Recommended Videos

“Our development team is still working hard on the update,” Kodak said in an Instagram post (below), which included “some successful test photos from our pilot-scale equipment.” It declined to offer a specific date for the relaunch of its once-popular 35mm color transparency film, though a blog post last November promised it would hit the market some time this year.

Kodak says that its Ektachrome 100 film was popular for its “extremely fine grain, clean colors, great tones and contrasts, [and] became iconic in no small part due to the extensive use of slide film by National Geographic magazine over several decades.”

If you’re wondering why Kodak can’t simply roll out the same production method as before, the company points out that it’s a “very complex film with over 80 ingredients, and many of those ingredients were not able to be purchased any longer.”

So its first step was to find out which places could make the necessary chemicals and which ones it could make itself, a process that in itself presented a “big challenge,” though one that it has clearly managed to overcome.

The fall and rise of Ektachrome

Kodak launched Ektachrome in the early 1940s, but facing financial difficulties in 2012 and citing lack of demand in the face of growing pressure from the fast-expanding digital market, the company ended production of many of its film types — Ektachrome among them.

In 2013, Kodak’s film photography unit was spun off into a new company called Kodak Alaris. In the last few years, the company said it started to receive an increasing number of inquiries asking if it had any plans to reintroduce any of its films.

“Sales of professional photographic films have been steadily rising over the last few years,” the company said in early 2017. It added that both professional and enthusiast photographers were “rediscovering the artistic control offered by manual processes and the creative satisfaction of a physical end product.”

With the launch apparently just around the corner, Ektachrome fans will soon have the chance to once again load it into their film cameras. We look forward to seeing some of the results.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Adobe Firefly AI will let you edit in creative software by just talking your way through it
Adobe's new AI Assistant can now run your entire creative workflow. Yes, all of it.
Adobe Firefly logo on dark background

Adobe has quietly been building something big inside Firefly, its all-in-one creative AI studio. And today, the company is ready to show it off.

Meet Firefly AI Assistant, a conversational tool that lets you describe what you want to create and then handles the execution across Adobe's entire app ecosystem, including Photoshop, Premiere, Lightroom, Express, and Illustrator. 

Read more
Sony is halting sales of memory cards and you have AI to blame for it
Global memory shortages driven by AI demand are now hitting cameras and storage cards.
Sony SD Card

Sony has hit pause on a major part of its storage business, and not-so-surprisingly, AI is one of the reasons behind it. The company has officially announced that it is temporarily suspending orders for most of its CFexpress and SD memory cards, citing a global shortage of semiconductor memory.

The suspension applies to both retailers and direct customers, and there’s currently no clear timeline for when sales will resume. This isn’t just a minor supply hiccup. Instead, it’s a sign of a much bigger problem brewing across the tech industry.

Read more
4K stabilized footage, 10km transmission range, and 93 minutes of flight for $309: the DJI Mini 4K is on sale
DJI Mini 4K Fly More Combo drops to $309 (31% off): 4K gimbal camera, 3 batteries, 93-min flight time.
DJI Mini 4K Fly More Combo deal

The DJI Mini 4K Fly More Combo is down to $309 at Amazon, a $140 saving off its $449 list price. For that you're getting a sub-249-gram drone with a 4K 3-axis gimbal camera, 10km video transmission range, and three batteries in the box for up to 93 minutes of total flight time. As entry points into serious aerial photography go, this is one of the more complete packages at this price.

get the deal

Read more