DESCRIPTIONKODAK ROYAL GOLD 1000 Film with its high sharpness and good grain is intended for low-light situations or subjects that require higher shutter speeds to stop action. It also allows you to use high shutter speeds for hand-holding telephoto lenses, or small apertures for increasing depth of field. Its improved sensitivity to tungsten light will provide pleasing results in situations where the lighting is difficult to meter. Although the film is balanced for exposure with daylight or electronic flash, you can also expose it with most existing light sources without filters. ROYAL GOLD 1000 Film is a member of the "Select Series" of Kodak films. The Select Series offers serious snapshooters and photo enthusiasts the widest selection of high-performance films. Choose from KODACHROME or KODAK ELITE Chrome Films for slides, or KODAK ROYAL GOLD for prints. Contents
FEATURES AND BENEFITS
DARKROOM RECOMMENDATIONSDo not use a safelight. Handle unprocessed film in total darkness. STORAGE AND HANDLINGLoad and unload film in subdued light. Store unexposed film at 70°F (21°C) or lower in the original sealed package. Always store film (exposed or unexposed) in a cool, dry place. Process film as soon as possible after exposure. Protect negatives from strong light, and store them in a cool, dry place. For more information on storing negatives, see KODAK Publication No. E-30, Storage and Care of KODAK Photographic Materials--Before and After Processing. Note: ROYAL GOLD 1000 Film is very sensitive to environmental radiation; expose and process it promptly. Request visual inspection at airport x-ray inspection stations. Some x-ray equipment may fog this film. EXPOSUREFilm Speed Use the speed numbers in the table below with cameras or meters marked for ISO, ASA, or DIN speeds or exposure indexes. Do not change the ISO-speed setting when metering through a filter.
* For best results without special printing. DaylightUse the exposures in the table below for average frontlit subjects from 2 hours after sunrise to 2 hours before sunset.
* Use f/8 for backlit close-up subjects. Electronic FlashUse the guide number in the following table as a starting point for your equipment. Select the unit output closest to the number given by your flash manufacturer. Then find the guide number for feet or metres. To determine the lens opening, divide the guide number by the flash-to-subject distance. If negatives are consistently too dense (overexposed), use a higher guide number; if they are too thin (underexposed), use a lower number.
* BCPS = beam candlepower seconds Fluorescent and High-Intensity Discharge LampsUse the color-compensating filters and exposure adjustments in the tables below as starting points to expose this film under fluorescent or high-intensity discharge lamps. For critical applications, make a series of test exposures under your actual conditions. To avoid the brightness and color variations that occur during a single alternating-current cycle, use exposure times of 1/60 second or longer with fluorescent lamps; with high-intensity discharge lamps, use exposure times of 1/125 second or longer.
Note: When you don't know the type of fluorescent lamps, try a 10C + 20M filter combination and increase exposure by 2/3 stop; color rendition will probably be less than optimum.
*This is a high-pressure sodium-vapor lamp. The information in the table may not apply to other manufacturers' high-pressure sodium-vapor lamps because of differences in spectral characteristics. Note: Some primary color filters were used in the previous tables to reduce the number of filters and keep the exposure adjustment to a minimum. Red filters were substituted for equivalent filtration in magenta and yellow. Blue filters were substituted for equivalent filtration in cyan and magenta. Adjustments for Long and Short Exposures No filter correction or exposure compensation is required for exposures from 1/10,000 second to 10 seconds. PROCESSINGProcess ROYAL GOLD 1000 Film in KODAK FLEXICOLOR Chemicals for Process C-41. For more information, see KODAK Publication No. Z-131, Using KODAK FLEXICOLOR Chemicals. IMAGE STRUCTURE
Print Grain IndexThe Print Grain Index number refers to a method of defining graininess in a print made with diffuse-printing illumination. It replaces rms granularity and has a different scale which cannot be compared to rms granularity.
The Print Grain Index number printed in this publication applies to the following standards:
JUDGING NEGATIVE EXPOSUREYou can check the exposure level with a suitable electronic densitometer equipped with a filter such as a KODAK WRATTEN Gelatin Filter No. 92 or the red filter for Status M densitometry. Depending on the subject and the light source used for exposure, a normally exposed and processed color negative measured through the red filter should have the approximate densities listed below.
Because of the extreme range in skin color, use these red density values for a normally lighted forehead only as a guide. For best results, use a KODAK Gray Card (gray side). PRINTING NEGATIVESYou can make color prints from negatives by enlarging them on KODAK EKTACOLOR Papers or KODAK DURAFLEX® RA Print Material. Make color transparencies by direct exposure onto KODAK VERICOLOR Print Film, KODAK VERICOLOR Slide Film, or KODAK DURATRANS® RA or KODAK DURACLEARTM RA Display Material. Make black-and-white prints on KODAK PANALURE Papers for conventional black-and-white processing, or KODAK EKTAMAX RA Professional Papers for Process RA-4. Note: The Kodak materials described in this publication for use with KODAK ROYAL GOLD 1000 Film are available from dealers who supply Kodak products. You can use other materials, but you may not obtain similar results. AT-A-GLANCE FILM SELECTOR
Kodak, Advantix, Flexicolor, Vericolor, Ektapress, Gold, Royal Gold, Ektar, Wratten, Ektacolor, Duraflex, Duratrans, Duraclear, Panalure, and Ektamax are trademarks. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||