Kodachrome Capture One



The highly requested 1st of many Capture One color grading tutorial! Specifically for Fujifilm XT3, but I'm sure anyone can use these tutorials!Check out Cap. Stunning Kodak Film collection features 30+ fantastic Capture One film styles from the golden era of analog. With familiar fade and grit aesthetics, they capture the nostalgia of old childhood photos and are great for weddings and lifestyle photography. Kodak 01 Ektachrome 64 Kodak 02 Ektachrome 64 T. Processing a Kodachrome 64 In B&W 11 29 Share Tweet. Processing a Kodachrome 64 film as we all know is a very unique process (K-14). The production of this film stopped in 2010 but why stop at color processing when we can do it in black and white? A legend comes to Capture One. There’s a reason Kodachrome doesn’t show up often in preset makers’ portfolios – it’s really, really hard to get right. The fact it’s no longer possible to process it means a lot of the usual methods for making film styles simply can’t be done, it’s more of an art than a science. Kodak Kodachrome Last Roll, our emulation of the generic color reproduction of the last roll of McCurry; we spent months trying to replicate colors and light reproduction of this legendary film. We offer two different color reproductions: one for bright light conditions, one for low light-indoor.

KodachromeCapture one kodachrome 64

It wasn't easy being green. Or yellow or red or blue, for that matter. While color photography had been around in one form or another since the 1860s, until the Eastman Kodak Company came out with its Kodachrome film in 1935, those wishing to capture a color image had to deal with heavy glass plates, tripods, long exposures and an exacting development procedure, all of which resulted in less than satisfactory pictures — dull, tinted images that were far from true to life. So while Kodak's discontinuation of the iconic color film will affect only the most devoted photo buffs — sales of Kodachrome account for less than 1% of the company's revenue — the June 22 announcement breaks one of the largest remaining ties to the era of pre-digital photography. It also ends a legacy that includes some of the most enduring images of 20th century America.

(See photos by Richard Avedon.)

The Kodachrome process — in which three emulsions, each sensitive to a primary color, are coated on a single film base — was the brainchild of Leopold Godowsky Jr. and Leopold Mannes, two musicians turned scientists who worked at Kodak's research facility in Rochester, N.Y. Disappointed by the poor quality of a 'color' movie they saw in 1916, the two Leopolds spent years perfecting their technique, which Kodak first utilized in 1935 in 16-mm movie film. The next year, they tried out the process on film for still cameras, although the procedure was not for the hobbyist: the earliest 35-mm Kodachrome went for $3.50 a roll, or about $54 in today's dollars.

While all color films have dyes printed directly onto the film stock, Kodachrome's dye isn't added until the development process. 'The film itself is basically black and white,' says Grant Steinle, vice president of operations at Dwayne's Photo in Parsons, Kans., the only photo-processing center still equipped to develop Kodachrome film. Steinle says that although all dyes will fade over time, if Kodachrome is stored properly it can be good for up to 100 years. The film's archival abilities, coupled with its comparative ease of use, made it the dominant film for both professionals and amateurs for most of the 20th century. Kodachrome captured a color version of the Hindenburg's fireball explosion in 1936. It accompanied Edmund Hillary to the top of Mount Everest in 1953. Abraham Zapruder was filming with 8-mm Kodachrome in Dallas when he accidentally captured President Kennedy's assassination. National Geographic photographer Steve McCurry used it to capture the haunting green-gray eyes of an Afghan refugee girl in 1985 in what is still the magazine's most enduring cover image.

For 20 years, anyone wishing to develop Kodachrome film had to send it to a Kodak laboratory, which controlled all processing. In 1954, the Department of Justice declared Kodachrome-processing a monopoly, and the company agreed to allow other finishing plants to develop the film; the price of a roll of film — which previously had the processing cost added into it — fell roughly 43%.

Kodachrome Capture One Free

(Read about Kodak's antitrust case.)

Kodachrome's popularity peaked in the 1960s and '70s, when Americans' urge to catalog every single holiday, family vacation and birthday celebration hit its stride. Kodachrome II, a faster, more versatile version of the film, came out in 1961, making it even more appealing to the point-and-shoot generation. Super 8, a low-speed fine-grain Kodachrome movie film, was released in 1965 — and was used to film seemingly every wedding, beach holiday and backyard barbecue for the next decade. (Aficionados can check out the opening credits of the '80s coming-of-age drama The Wonder Years for a quick hit of nostalgia.) When Paul Simon sang, 'Mama, don't take my Kodachrome away' in 1973, Kodak was still expanding its Kodachrome line, and it was hard to believe that it would ever disappear. But by the mid-1980s, video camcorders and more easily processed color film from companies like Fuji and Polaroid encroached on Kodachrome's market share, and the film fell into disfavor. Compared to the newer technology, Kodachrome was a pain to develop. It required a large processing machine and several different chemicals and over a dozen processing steps. The film would never, ever be able to make the 'one-hour photo' deadline that customers increasingly came to expect. Finally in the early 2000s came the digital-photography revolution; digital sales today account for more than 70% of Kodak's revenue.

Kodak quit the film-processing business in 1988 and slowly began to disengage from film-manufacturing. Super 8 went by the wayside in 2007. By 2008 Kodak was producing only one Kodachrome film run — a mile-long sheet cut into 20,000 rolls — a year, and the number of centers able to process it had declined precipitously. Today, Steinle's Kansas store processes all of Kodak's Kodachrome film — if you drop a roll off at your local Wal-Mart, it will be developed at Dwayne's Photo — and though it is the only center left in the world, the company processes only a few hundred rolls a day.

Kodachrome Capture One

Kodachrome 64 slide film, discontinued on June 22, was the last type of true Kodachrome available — although the company expects existing stocks to last well into the fall. Kodak plans to donate the last remaining rolls of Kodachrome film to the George Eastman House's photography museum. One of them will be symbolically shot by McCurry — although the famed photographer gave up the format long ago. In fact, McCurry's photographic career perfectly traces the rise and fall of Kodak film. He shot his iconic Afghan-girl portrait on Kodachrome and returned 17 years later to photograph the same woman with Kodak's easier-to-develop Ektachrome. Now, he relies on digital.

Kodachrome Capture One Manual

Kodachrome

Capture One Kodachrome 64

Ask movie producer Jerry Bruckheimer your questions.Read TIME's 2001 article on digital photography.

Kodachrome Capture One Download

NEGATIVE FILMS

Agfa Optima 100 - clean / grainy / process variations
Agfa Optima 400 - clean / grainy / process variations
Agfa Vista 100 - clean / grainy / process variations
Fuji Natura 1600 - clean / grainy / process variations
Fuji Pro 160C - clean / grainy / process variations
Fuji Pro 400H - clean / grainy / process variations
Fuji Pro 800Z - clean / grainy / process variations
Fuji Superia 200 - clean / grainy / process variations
Fuji Superia 400 - clean / grainy / process variations
Fuji Superia 800 - clean / grainy / process variations
Fuji Superia 1600 - clean / grainy
Kodak Color Plus 200 - clean / grainy
Kodak Ektar 100 - clean / grainy / process variations
Kodak Gold 100 - clean / grainy / process variations
Kodak Gold 200 - clean / grainy
Kodak Gold 400 - clean / grainy / process variations
Kodak Gold 800 cool fade - clean / grainy
Kodak Portra 160C - clean / grainy / process variations
Kodak Portra 400 - clean / grainy / process variations
Kodak Portra 800 - clean / grainy / process variations
Rollei Digibase - clean / grainy / process variations
SLIDE FILMS

Agfa Precisa 100 - clean / grainy
Agfa RSX II 100 - clean / grainy
Fuji Astia 100F - clean / grainy / process variations
Fuji Fortia SP - clean / grainy / process variations
Fuji Provia 100F - clean / grainy / process variations
Fuji Sensia 100 - clean / grainy
Fuji Velvia 50 - clean / grainy
Fuji Velvia 100 - clean / grainy / process variations
Fuji Velvia 100F - clean / grainy
Kodak E100G - clean / grainy / process variations
Kodak E200 - clean / grainy / process variations
Kodak Elite - clean / grainy
INSTANT FILMS

Fuji FP 100C - clean / grainy / process variations
Fuji Instax Mini - clean / grainy / process variations
Polaroid 600 - clean / grainy / process variations
Polaroid 669 - clean / grainy / process variations
Polaroid 690 - clean / grainy / process variations
BW FILMS

Agfa Scala 200 - clean / grainy
Fomapan 100 - clean / grainy
Ilford Delta 100 - clean / grainy
Ilford Delta 400 - clean / grainy
Ilford Delta 3200 - clean / grainy
Ilford HP5 - clean / grainy
Ilford Pan F Plus - clean / grainy
Kodak T-Max 100 - clean / grainy
Kodak T-Max 3200 - clean / grainy
Kodak Tri-x 100 - clean / grainy
VINTAGE FILMS

Agfacolor 40s - clean / grainy / process variations
Agfacolor 50s - clean / grainy / process variations
Agfacolor 60s - clean / grainy
Agfacolor XPS 160 - clean / grainy / process variations
Kodachrome 40s - clean / grainy
Kodachrome 50s - clean / grainy / process variations
Kodachrome 60s - clean / grainy / process variations
Kodachrome 64 - clean / grainy / process variations
Kodachrome 1958 - clean / grainy / process variations
Kodachrome 2000s - clean / grainy / process variations
Technicolor 2 (approximate simulation) - clean / grainy

NOTE ON CAPTURE ONE LAYERS SUPPORT

This product implements the best possible support for Capture One layers, allowing you to adjust film intensity and even mix different film looks together. However some of the Capture One adjustments like film grain can't be applied to Capture One layers while some other adjustments like curves may affect more than one layer at once. We hope that Phase One will be able to add full layer support for all of their tools and better isolate the layer adjustments from each other in the future.

NOTE ON 'EXTREME' VERSIONS

When using RNI All Films for Capture One you may notice that some of our film styles come with 'extreme' versions. In many cases these versions allow you to achieve much more natural-looking results with more film-like tonal response, especially in highlights.

However these looks come at a price. First — they are for RAW only. Second — they may contain some extreme values of RAW adjustments leaving very little room for your own edits. Also such versions may not be fully supported by Capture One layers or produce unexpected results if applied to layers.

To summarise: using the 'extreme' style versions can be rewarding. However they require more skill and discipline from the photographer. Generally, to fully benefit from the extreme style versions your skill and judgement of lighting should be good enough to get things right straight out of camera.