Kodak · ISO 25 Color negative

Kodak Ektar 25

Color negative ISO 25 Discontinued ultra-fine grain · narrow latitude · macro and copy work

Kodak previewed Ektar 25 at Photokina in October 1988 and marketed it the following year as the sharpest color print film in the world. That claim was less ridiculous than it sounds. The emulsion used T-grain crystals coated in nine layers instead of the usual twelve, with DIAR couplers handling color correction during development. Reviewers at the time noted that focusing enlargements got difficult because the grain practically vanished. Some compared 35mm Ektar 25 prints to medium format.

The specifics that made the grain work also made the film hostile to mistakes. Latitude is narrow. Contrast runs high. A third of a stop of overexposure pushes highlights toward clipping, and shadow detail blocks faster than on Gold 100 or any negative film working photographers were used to. Kodak positioned it for serious amateurs, medical photography, photomicrography, and super-macro work where every grain particle was being enlarged ten or twenty times.

Color rendering was the public weakness. Early batches pushed yellows toward magenta and blues toward cyan, problems that improved in later runs but never disappeared. Skin tones required compromise. The film was a precision tool for subjects where detail mattered more than color accuracy, and a poor fit for wedding labs that wanted a forgiving 35mm negative.

Kodak ended production in 1994 and final stocks sold through 1997. The Royal Gold line replaced it. There is no current Ektar 25; the 2008 Ektar 100 carries the name but uses a different emulsion family. Freezer rolls turn up at estate sales, generally past thirty years old, showing the keeping issues that were baked in from the start.

Reciprocity exponent is 1.20. Zone Light Meter applies the correction past one second. A 30-second meter reading lands closer to a minute at the negative, which matters in macro and copy work where small apertures push exposures into the tripod range routinely. The narrow latitude makes the correction important: there is no room to absorb the error if you skip it.

How the app handles this stock

  • Box speed: ISO 25. Picker exposes pull/push chips so you can shoot it at any speed you want and the meter follows.
  • Reciprocity: Above one second the app raises metered time to the power of 1.20.
  • Expired film: if you load an old roll, set the expiry year and storage in the app and the ISO scales for you. Color negative decay rates are baked in.

Frequently asked questions

What ISO is Kodak Ektar 25?

Kodak Ektar 25 is an ISO 25 color negative film from Kodak. You can rate it at box speed or push and pull it; set the speed you actually shot and the meter follows.

Is Kodak Ektar 25 still in production?

No. Kodak Ektar 25 is discontinued, so it is freezer stock and the secondhand market now. Expired rolls drift slower over time, so many shooters overexpose a stop.

Does Kodak Ektar 25 suffer from reciprocity failure?

Yes, on exposures longer than about one second. Its reciprocity exponent is 1.20, so a metered 10 seconds becomes about 16 seconds. Zone Light Meter applies this automatically.

More from Kodak

Related reading

← Back to the full film catalog

Search documentation