Kodak Portra is a family of daylight-balanced professional color negative films originally introduced in 1998 made mainly for portrait and wedding applications.[1] They are successors of the professional Vericolor films (VPS and VPL), which succeeded Ektacolor films earlier. The films are available in three speeds — 160, 400, and 800 ISO — with the 160 and 400 speed formerly available as "natural color" (NC) and "vivid color" (VC) varieties before the 2011 update.[2][3]
Portra 160 | |
---|---|
Maker | Kodak |
Speed | 160/23° |
Type | Color print |
Balance | Daylight |
Process | C-41 |
Format | 35mm, 120, 220, 4×5 in, 10x8 in |
Grain | "Extremely fine" |
Saturation | "Balanced" |
Application | Portraiture |
Portra 400 | |
---|---|
Speed | 400/27° |
Type | Color |
Format | 35mm, 120, 220, 4×5 in, 10x8 in |
Grain | "Very Fine" |
Saturation | "Balanced" |
Application | Portraiture, Travel |
Portra 800 | |
---|---|
Speed | 800/30° |
Type | Color |
Format | 35mm, 120, 220 |
Grain | "Very fine" |
Saturation | "Balanced" |
Application | Portraiture |
The film has been upgraded by newer versions several times in the last few years, starting in 2006,[4] to improve grain and scanning performance.[5][6][7]
2010 Portra 400 upgrade
editKodak introduced a new version of the Portra 400 film which replaced the NC and VC versions in late 2010. The new film incorporates a number of technological advances from the Kodak Vision line of motion pictures films. Kodak lists finer grain, improved sharpness over 400 NC and naturally rendered skin tones as some of the improvements over the existing NC and VC line.[8]
Kodak also lists improved scanning performance as a feature. The "NC" and "VC" varieties of the film were introduced to address the need for different levels of contrast and color saturation when printing, and adjusting these image attributes tend to be more difficult with traditional color darkroom printing than with digital imaging. This has influenced a decision to merge the two varieties of the film based on the assumption that most prints are currently made from digital scans which allow for these adjustments to be carried out digitally.[9]
2011 Portra 160 upgrade
editKodak announced in February 2011 that Portra 160 was to be similarly replaced by a single version like the 400 and incorporate the same upgrades as the new 400 speed version.[10] This has been available since mid-2011 in 135, 120, 220 and sheet format. The new film is easy to scan, according to reviews.[11]
See also
edit- Fujicolor Pro - A similar family of films from Fujifilm
- List of photographic films
- List of discontinued photographic films
References
edit- ^ "Lomography - Kodak Portra 160nc (35mm, 160 iso)".
- ^ "Films worth shooting with before they're gone". 29 May 2019.
- ^ "KODAK PROFESSIONAL PORTRA 160NC, 160VC, 400NC, 400VC, and 800 Films" (PDF). Kodak. February 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
- ^ "Milestones". Archived from the original on 2016-03-17. Retrieved 2016-05-28.
- ^ "Kodak Professional Portra 400-speed colour negative film" (Press release). ePHOTOzine. 25 March 2008. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
- ^ "Kodak Introduces Enhanced PORTRA Color Negative Films with Finer Grain, Spectacular Skin Tones, Vivid Color and Ideal Scanning Performance" (Press release). Cameratown. September 11, 2006. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
- ^ "PMA - Kodak Intros Portra 800, Improves Film Characteristics" (Press release). AllBusiness. February 17, 2006. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
- ^ "KODAK PROFESSIONAL PORTRA 400 Film: Questions and Answers". Retrieved 2010-10-28.
- ^ "Inside Analog Photo Radio – Scott DiSabato". 2010-10-02. Archived from the original on 2010-10-22. Retrieved 2011-01-03.
- ^ "KODAK PROFESSIONAL PORTRA 160 Film". Kodak.com. Retrieved 2015-05-15.
- ^ "Kodak Portra 160: User Review".