What we have here is nothing short of a ground-shaking and hand-clapping revolution in analog photography. This is the world’s very first pre-loaded and ready-to-shoot RedScale film – designed to re-cast your image in a sea of powerful and seriously intense red, orange, and yellow tones.
What we have here is nothing short of a ground-shaking and hand-clapping revolution in analog photography. This is the world’s very first pre-loaded and ready-to-shoot RedScale film – designed to re-cast your image in a sea of powerful and seriously intense red, orange, and yellow tones.
Basically RedScale is about exposing a roll of colour negative film from the “wrong side”: meaning that first the base of the film is exposed, then the layers with the emulsions. Until now this was only possible for those with a passion for DIY handiwork, who would painstakingly flip their films in the darkroom. Now, for the first time ever, you can buy this kind of film ready-to-shoot!
Lomography RedScale loads perfectly into all Lomographic Cameras such as the LC-A, LC-A+ or the Diana+ with its 35mm Back. Sensibility is 100 ISO and the results are stunning – that’s for sure!






















10 comments
superlighter
just add some of mine made with a fujifilm superia 400 (the reddish)and with a kodak gold 400 (more yellow).
I love how look the sky, cloudy days are the best for shot redscale.
superlighter
stupid me! you need only Lomography RedScale film shots...
graefin
Redscaling is the best reason to use normal colourfilm again (instead of the favoured slide film)!
The pictures look great. Everyday summer ;)
poshone
Bought mine @ Photokina & I'm about to have them back tomorrow! Can't wait.. Pics here look stunning!
kylethefrench
fail for me
xbalboax
now all we need is redscale 120 film!
vicuna
Fantastic film indeed!! Thanks LSI for producing this new 35mm film!! :)))
butter
I hate to be a little anti-LSI but why not just MAKE this film? You can get an empty spool from a lab and 4 or 5 rolls of some color film for 5 or 6 bucks and just wind the film backward into the empty spool in a dark room (bathroom + duct tape) instead of blowing almost $5 a roll on this stuff.
foole
day3hugger
is this film good for very bright conditions?