Fujifilm · ISO 50 Slide

Fujifilm Velvia 50

Slide ISO 50 In production maximum saturation · narrow latitude · landscape staple

Drop a sheet of Velvia 50 onto a light table next to anything else and your eye snaps to it. The saturation is not just turned up; the curve is built around making colors louder than they actually are in the world. Greens shift toward emerald, reds toward fire-engine, skies toward cyan. Galen Rowell built his entire career on this. Frans Lanting still loads it for his National Geographic work because the editors want the print to leap.

Velvia is also the least forgiving slide film made. Two-thirds of a stop of overexposure and the highlights are gone. A third of a stop under and the shadows block. Bracketing is not optional. Most large-format landscape shooters meter incident, place the highlight on zone VII, and let everything else fall. The Zone System and Velvia are built for each other.

Fujifilm killed the original Velvia 50 in 2005 and reissued it in 2007 after pressure from working photographers. The current emulsion is close to the original but not identical; old hands swear they can see the difference. Available now in 35mm and 120 only. Fujifilm shipped the last 8x10 boxes in December 2021 and ended 4x5 in early 2023, citing difficulty sourcing raw materials. Large-format shooters who still want a Velvia look have to fall back on Velvia 100 in 4x5.

The reciprocity exponent is 1.10, but Velvia also has a famous color crossover past about four seconds: shadows go magenta and highlights warm. There is no clean math correction for this. If you are shooting nocturnes, switch to Provia 100F.

How the app handles this stock

  • Box speed: ISO 50. 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 1.10.
  • Expired film: if you load an old roll, set the expiry year and storage in the app and the ISO scales for you. Slide decay rates are baked in.

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