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Kodak kodacolor 100

Kodak Kodacolor 100 was a fine-grain, low-speed consumer color negative film in the Kodacolor line, rated ISO 100 and processed in C-41. Part of a legacy consumer line eventually discontinued circa 2007 and succeeded by ColorPlus 200.

Key specs

Brand
Kodak
Model
kodacolor 100
ISO
100
Process
C41
Formats
135
Production status
Discontinued
Discontinued
2007

Grain

Unknown

Contrast

moderate

Saturation

Unknown

Latitude

Unknown

Rendering profile

Technical details

Handling notes

Storage
room temperature; avoid heat

Profile notes

Kodak Kodacolor 100 is part of Kodak's long-running Kodacolor consumer color negative film line, one of the first widespread consumer color negative brands. The ISO 100 version delivered fine grain, high sharpness, and saturated, warm color rendition characteristic of the Kodacolor/Gold family. It was positioned as an economy entry-level film for everyday snapshot use in bright conditions. Processed in standard C-41. By the mid-2000s, the Kodacolor name was being phased out in favor of the Gold and ColorPlus branding; the line was fully discontinued around 2007. Note: Eastman Kodak introduced new Kodacolor 100 and 200 films in late 2025 under the revived brand, but the Canistr record with code 'Kd1' refers to the original pre-2007 discontinued emulsion.

Aliases

Kodacolor 100Kodak Kodacolor 100

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