Agfa · ISO 800 Color negative
Agfa Vista 800
Vista 800 is the runt of the family. It existed mostly to round out a product line that needed a fast option for indoor and dim-light snapshots, and it never built the cult following that Vista 200 and 400 enjoyed in their Poundland heyday. Production wound down earlier than the rest of the line. Most sources put Vista 800's end around 2013, well before the 2018 discontinuation that took out the slower speeds.
Grain at ISO 800 was noticeably coarser than Fuji Superia 800 or Kodak Portra 800 of the same era. Color was punchy in the standard Vista way, leaning toward warm reds and dense blues, with the ruddy skin tendency of the 400 version amplified by the higher speed. In bright daylight the grain almost reads as deliberate texture. In dim mixed light, which is where you would actually need ISO 800, the color shifts get harder to control and shadow detail falls off fast.
A few photographers used it as a low-stakes way to learn flash photography indoors, where the high speed let them work at smaller apertures with on-camera flash without burning a roll of Portra. As a serious low-light film it was outclassed by Superia 800 throughout its life.
Manufacturer history follows the rest of the line. Original Agfa-Gevaert until 2005, then license-held production through Ferrania and later Fujifilm. The earlier discontinuation suggests demand was thin enough that the supply chain pulled it before the slower speeds.
Only expired stock circulates now and high-speed films suffer the most from age. Expect a stop or more of speed loss on rolls more than a few years past expiration, plus color shifts that no amount of correction will fully fix.
Reciprocity exponent is 1.20. Zone Light Meter applies the correction past one second, so a 30-second meter reading becomes about 60 seconds at the negative. In normal Vista 800 use you will rarely cross the one-second threshold; this is a film made for handheld indoor work, not tripod long exposures.
How the app handles this stock
- Box speed: ISO 800. 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.