What film should have been?

EdwardKaraa

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What if Kodak never had the good/bad idea to invent digital sensors?

Just for fun, what film in 2013 would have been?

A couple of ideas:

- Super duper resolution grainless wide latitude film.
- Super hard coating, can't scratch the film even with a razor blade.
- Auto-developing film in the camera when you rewind it into the cassette.
- Auto-iso.
- Grain free iso 12500.
- Super duper scanner scans an entire roll in 36 seconds in raw format.
 
6400 iso Kodachrome that is just as great as the 64 iso. And it should come in 120 format. And can be develloped at any lab. Otherwise I'm not asking much.
 
What if Kodak never had the good/bad idea to invent digital sensors?

Just for fun, what film in 2013 would have been?

A couple of ideas:

- Super duper resolution grainless wide latitude film.
- Super hard coating, can't scratch the film even with a razor blade.
- Auto-developing film in the camera when you rewind it into the cassette.
- Auto-iso.
- Grain free iso 12500.
- Super duper scanner scans an entire roll in 36 seconds in raw format.

You just forgot the USB3 port ....:D
 
IMO, film already was/is everything it should be.

Were film still the dominant recording medium, I expect we would simply see more of the incremental development of tonal capture and dynamic range that we see today in films like Fuji ACROS.

G
 
I would have liked to see large format roll film. If they can make 120 in roll format, why not double the size and then you could have 4x5 roll film, in fact 4xanything, same as 120 can be 6x4.5 or 6x17.
 
basically....

Just a scratch resistant base and emulsion sides
Zero Curl after drying, although Ilford and Kodak B&W are dry fairly flat.
 
I would have liked to see large format roll film. If they can make 120 in roll format, why not double the size and then you could have 4x5 roll film, in fact 4xanything, same as 120 can be 6x4.5 or 6x17.

Has been done. 5" and 9 1/2" bulk rolls still are available - these are the regular sizes aerial cameras use. And 3 1/4" (QP) to 5" wide roll film types on wood/metal rolls similar to 120 were not that odd early on in the history of film. Kodak had some dozen variations on the topic of roll films wider than 3") - the last, 122, was cancelled not that far away, in the early seventies.
 
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