Kodak Ektar 100 Fujifilm recipe

Digitally recreating Kodak’s most controversial film stock in camera.

Øyvind Nordhagen
7 min readFeb 12, 2023

Ektar was launched twice so Kodak must have really meant it. First in 1989 in ISO 25, 100, 400 and 1000, then succeeded by Kodak Gold in 1997 only to be relaunched in the single 100 ISO speed in 2008. I’ve actually shot my fair share of it but as bad luck would have it I wasn’t able to recover any of my negatives for scanning. That means I had to combine my own recollection of it with vast amounts of online research to pinpoint the characteristics.

A controversial film stock

During said research I realised that Ektar really is a divisive film stock. People either love it or hate it to an extent I find fascinating. I really was the analog equivalent of a pixel peeper back then so I tended to favour neutral, fine grained films and Fujifilm Reala was a favourite. Most Fuji stocks are a bit on the green/magenta side where most Kodak’s are a bit red/yellow. Ektar was the perfect middle ground for me. This makes Ektar a bit of an outlier in the Kodak lineup as it doesn’t have the typical Kodak look. It’s not as cyan in the blues, not as cold and dark in the greens and not as candy apple yellowy red as the others. It’s also more contrasty and saturated, and I suspect it was Kodak’s take on Fujifilm Velvia’s market…

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Øyvind Nordhagen

Photographer based in Oslo. I write about photographic technique and editing.