Polaroid High Definition Color 100 is a color negative film. It was distributed by Polaroid. However, it was not manufactured by the American photo pioneer, but by Konica.
The color negative film has a nominal sensitivity of ISO 100, which is the basis for color pictures. Today, you should overexpose the film a bit. The reason is that films lose sensitivity over the years. The film is developed for photos in daylight.
Color film is developed using the C-41 process. The color negative process is standardized. It is offered by the vast majority of photo labs. For example, you can take the color film to Rossmann and DM for development.
The Polaroid High Definition Color 100 was available for the 35mm format. The production of the color negative film was stopped. Today, you can reach for the Kodak Ektar 100* as an alternative, for example. This color negative film has a sensitivity of ISO 100 and is for 35mm cameras. It is developed in the C-41 process.
Technical datasheet
| Attribute | Specification |
|---|---|
| 35mm Format | Yes |
| Development process | C-41 / CN-16 / CNK-4 / AP-70 |