Shanghai GP3 (120, 100 iso) User-Review
written by eggzakly
on June 12th, 2009
, 7 comments
(7 votes)

Manufactured in China by the SMPIC Photosensitive Materials Factory. At £16.14 for 10 rolls incl. shipping to Europe, this is possibly the cheapest fresh film available.
From the moment you take it out of the faded reddish foil package, this film screams cheap! There are no visible markings on the roll, and it’s held shut with a piece of masking tape.
Be careful when loading the film, as the frame numbers on the backing paper are extremely faint. A clean frame counter window and a light source are necessities. I always manage to forget about this, pop in the film, and wind and wind and wind until eventually I think “hey…”. Of course at that point it’s much too late and I have to find a dark place to pull the film out and rewind it again.
If you like to develop your own film, I’ve got more bad news for you: This film is so curly you won’t believe it, count on at least 5-10 minutes of swearing and mental hair-pulling before successfully loading the reel. It’s also extremely fragile when wet and scratches and chips easily. Another oddity is the complete lack of frame numbers on the developed negative, in fact the only marking of any kind is “SG PFF”.
The final result is an image with grain the size of small moons, but bucket loads of charm. It lends a moody, film noir quality to the subject matter – perfect for shooting pictures of the Eiffel Tower or afternoons of with coffee and cigarettes. An added bonus is the chocolaty sepia tone you get if you scan the negative in colour.
In the end, what I’m trying to say is this: Film is like people, you like it for its positive qualities, but grow to love it for its imperfections.
Sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photographic_film#Companies_that_manufacture_photographic_film
http://photo.net/black-and-white-photo-film-processing-forum/00JzUN
http://www.apug.org/forums/archive/index.php/t-4761.html
















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