Fuji 64T Type II: An Unpredictable, Rare Tungsten Film

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The Fuji 64T Type II is a different tungsten alternative to the popular Lomography X Tungsten film!

A while ago I traded 2 films with a friend — one Fuji T64, and another a 64T Type II, both expired. I asked her what’s the difference but she hasn’t tried any of them before. I used the Fuji T64 first and the results, after cross processing it, appeared purplish and pink). It was a good film, but quite hard to find anywhere.

I didn’t use the 64T Type II until recently on my trip to Venice. As the main films I used were Lomography's X Tungsten 64, I thought the 64T Type II would yield similar results. But as it turned out, the colors are totally different.

The overall hue of this film can be quite unpredictable; colours ranging from blue to yellow are quite dominant. As the photos are shot in gloomy skies, results could differ under a sunny condition. The film greatly helped in increasing the saturation with similar effect as the Lomography X-Pro 200 film.

The photos appear to be warmer, and more yellow indoors, and in outdoors they turn out to have cooler, bluer shades.

Either way, if you manage to come across this rare film, do give it a try! As an alternative, so far from what I observed from my photos from this roll, it would be the Lomography X-Pro 200 film.

geschrieben von shuttersentinel17 am 2012-01-02 in #Ausrüstung #slide #expired #review #tungsten #malaysia #cross #venice #processed #64t #fuji-film #lomography #italy #x-pro #user-review #type-ii

12 Kommentare

  1. adzfar
    adzfar ·

    I've used this film for my first time. The result so unbelievable and amazing!

  2. itsdebraanne
    itsdebraanne ·

    love the colors!

  3. gegana06
    gegana06 ·

    surely the 64T II has a unique colour...
    I still have 1 roll in my freeze box. And the 64T II is a must have film :)

  4. analemes
    analemes ·

    You got really great results! Love the colors as well.

    I guess what happened here is that you used a film made for taking pictures iluminated by halogen lamps (or tungsten lamps) outdoors, meaning, using sunlight as lightining source and not halogen.
    This film has the cooler curves high to neutralize the yellow from the halogen lamps. I'm not sure I'm being very clear! (English problems right now :)
    Make a test, will not look the same, but in digital cameras you can change the white balance to tungsten, then take outside pics, that's what I'm talking about :)

    Again, congrats, I loved the photos!

  5. feelux
    feelux ·

    Great photos!

  6. kathleenmendoza
    kathleenmendoza ·

    Beautiful pictures!

  7. eva_eva
    eva_eva ·

    Nice colors!

  8. tsaramaso
    tsaramaso ·

    nice colors! I tested Lomography's X Tungsten 64, but the results are purplish and pink...I don't know why...How did you process your pics?

  9. carolinep008
    carolinep008 ·

    wow!!! seriously amazing photos, colors turned out so cool!

  10. sarah-addison-dobard
    sarah-addison-dobard ·

    What is. The best ISO to shoot this at? Is it 64, like the film is rated for?

  11. shuttersentinel17
    shuttersentinel17 ·

    @sarah-addison-dobard I shoot it at ISO100 because my camera can't go any lower than that. I guess if you shoot it at 64 it would look great too!

  12. bigjack
    bigjack ·

    I used to use this film for work! But I never did cross precess with it... It was a very sharp and color-trustfully film. X-pro looks very good too. Unpredictable but good!

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