The Klick Max 24 is a colour negative film. The 24 is designed for colour photography. The sensitivity of the film is specified as ISO 200.
The films were distributed by Klick Photopoint, a supplier from Great Britain. It was probably made by Fujifilm. For some time, expired Klick Max films were sold by Lomography.
Development of the film
The films are developed in C-41 development chemistry. The C-41 development process is offered by the vast majority of laboratories. The C-41 process is standardized. With some skill, the films can also be developed in your own laboratory. The result of the development is the finished negative.
Availability and alternatives
You could only buy the 24 for the 35mm format. With one copy of the film you could take 24 photos. A DX code was printed on the cartridge. The Klick Max 24 is no longer produced and is therefore no longer available. For the 35mm format the Kodak Gold 200* would be an alternative.
Example photos
All sample photos were taken with the Canon AE-1 and digitized with the Canoscan 9000F (eBay / Amazon*).
Technical datasheet
Attribute | Specification |
---|---|
35mm Format | Yes |
Development process | C-41 / CN-16 / CNK-4 / AP-70 |
Country of production | Japan |