Kodak High Definition 400 Print Film

Kodak High Definition 400 Print Film 

DESCRIPTION

Provides a unique balance of fine grain, sharpness, color reproduction, and contrast to yield results with excellent clarity and enlargement capability. This multi-purpose film is designed for exposure with daylight or electronic flash. You can also obtain pleasing results under most existing-light sources without filters.

USER REVIEWS

Showing 1-10 of 29  
[Jul 14, 2009]
Axle
Intermediate

Strength:

- Deep Rich Colour
- Uses the standard C-41, can be processed at your local 1hr lab.

Weakness:

- only came in 24 rolls
- hard to come by now

It's funny to have a film defined as "High Definition" because one doesn't usually combine film with high-def. However the film does live up to the name. I mostly used this film back in the days when I was just starting out with photography, and then shortly thereafter it became harder to get let alone find. So I never had a chance to stock up on this spectacular film.

This film clearly takes the cake when it comes to outdoor shooting, rich deep colours make it really stand out against other film at the time within the same category (For example, this wouldn't stand up to Velvia for depth and saturation but Velvia is slide film...apples and oranges people). Probably my favourite shots I've taken with this was the sunrise shot titled "6:02am" which I've never been able to duplicate both in film or digital. If you don't want to wait for your slide film to come back, this is the perfect alternative.

If you come across the film, grab it, worth your while.

Customer Service

N/A

Similar Products Used:

Kodak Max 400

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Jul 29, 2006]
Tom Nadramia
Intermediate

Strength:

Realistic, sharp colors; little or no grain, 100 ISO "look" at 400 speed, great value for the money

Weakness:

None that I can think of, although I have used this film exclusively outdoors (i.e, no indoor flash)

I also find the negative reviews here inexplicable. Perhaps bad printing from the lab? I have used this film as my outdoor everyday print film for over a year (I also shoot slide film). For a 400 print film, it gives great results-very little grain-very realistic colors, and a great film if you are into enlargements. Prints don't look like they came from a 400 film.For the money (about $10 for a 3 pak) this film can't be beat. How good is it, I've recommended it to two serious photographers (Leica owners) for their everyday family snapshots--they both quickly became converts after 1 roll.

Customer Service

n/a

Similar Products Used:

Portra 400 NC and VC, Kodak Max 400 (do not recomend)

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[May 14, 2006]
NikonNut
Expert

Strength:

One of the finest grain ISO 400 print films.
Excellent skin tones.
Good in mixed lighting (Fuji NPS 160 may be slightly better).
Widely available at non-specialized retailers like drugstores and grocers.

Weakness:

Retail packages overpriced.
I no longer trust Kodak to continue any line of quality film.

This is a low-mid contrast film that offers very fine grain, neutral/accurate colors, good exposure latitude and overall performance that equals or exceeds competing films like NPH. It is not even remotely similar to Max, but is rather like the now-discontinued Supra 400 (although perhaps slightly less saturated). This film also scans well, with little color correction required.

The negative reviews here are inexplicable to me. I recently gave a roll of this to a friend who steadfastly refused to shoot anything over ISO 200 due to grain. He is now a convert. Try this film - you won't be disappointed!

Customer Service

N/A

Similar Products Used:

Fuji NPH (nearest current competitor).
Kodak Supra
Many other print/slide films.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
3
[Mar 03, 2006]
Jonathan8001
Expert

Strength:

For a situation where low contrast is desired, this film would serve in a pinch, but grain would likely be a problem. Sometimes a grainy look is desired - and this film can produce some wonderfully grainy results in any light. Some pictures turned out with a soft, early morning, pleasently grainy look.

Weakness:

Pronounced grain, poor colour balance and consistency. Low value for the price.

I have used 4 rolls on a broad range of indoor and outdoor subjects, processed at 2 different labs. Grain: I wondered if my expectations were too high...So I have 5X7 prints, both on kodak paper, both from the same excellent lab, both infront of me right now - one set Fuji 1600, one set Kodak 400 High Definition. Same SLR and lens. Surprisingly, the grain in the 400 HD is often as pronounced as that in the Fuji 1600, both in good light. I can hardly believe it myself. Some photos in extremely bright light show minimal grain, but most photos have clearly pronounced grain. Even most outdoor pictures in bright sunlight show significant grain. Hardly 200 speed equivalent. Contrast: Like others have noted, contrast is very flat. Even a photo with bright sun reflections on the water appears lifeless. Shadowed areas are confused and tend to dark grey, with very little gradation, colour, and detail. Whites, however, often look fairly authentic and don't glare. Colour: Colours are really bizarre. Red tile roofs sometimes appear purple, and red double decker buses on a grey day are freakishly saturated. Whole prints often have a pink cast. Greens are sometimes outstanding and bright, other times, nearly grey. It is the least consistent film I have ever used, including some discount films. Blue also lacks consitency and is typically undersaturated. This film reminds me very much of Walmart Canada's "Rave" film. Even golden hour shots are bland. People who think this film looks natural have very different eyes than I, and must live in a very dull looking world. Or, their labs know something the 2 that I use don't. Quite possibly the least satisfying film I have ever used.

Similar Products Used:

Fuji Superia, Fuji, Konica, Kodak Max, Agfa

OVERALL
RATING
2
VALUE
RATING
1
[Feb 26, 2005]
trainiax
Intermediate

Strength:

-Fine grain (for a 400-speed film) -Balanced colours -Versatility

Weakness:

-Bland contrast -The grain is still there...

I tried this film to maintain the versatility of a 400-speed film with a finer grain. The results were fairly good. Kodak H-D 400 has a finer grain than standard MAX 400, and details are sharper. Colours are well balanced. However, the film's contrast was quite low, so the photos looked bland. I was somewhat tricked into thinking that "High definition" meant a leap forward from MAX 400, while in fact the improvement is modest (H-D is still a 400-speed film) Since I mostly take outdoor photos, I've switched to 100-speed films with finer grains. However, among 400-speed films, Kodak H-D 400 is a good choice.

Customer Service

Not needed

Similar Products Used:

Fujicolor Superia 100, 200, 400 Fujicolor Reala 100 Fujichrome Sensia 100 Kodak 100, 200, 400

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
4
[Nov 09, 2004]
pxprosumer
Expert

Strength:

Excellent print quality and great enlargements if properly processed and printed.

Weakness:

Too dependent on either Kodak's processing or its C-41 chemicals and paper, which can be a hassle when traveling and needing to see results quickly, or needing to process while out of the US, or needing to process to avoid potential x-ray damage at airports.

Processing and printing by Kodak itself or with Kodak C-41 chemicals and paper yield the best results for color balance and sharpness. This is definitely a high resolution film with extremely fine grain, and the resulting prints can be stunningly crisp, sharp, and grainless and that bring out the best in a lens. The problem for me arises when I am traveling and cannot find ready access to either Kodak processing and printing or a lab the uses Kodak C-41 chemicals and paper and well calibrated and focused printers. If I have to use a lab that uses other brand chemicals and paper, I wind up with a slight yellow cast that can be distractingly annoying, at least for me and those who view my prints.

Customer Service

Reasonably good response from Kodak. Unfortunately though, Kodak continues to sell this emulsion in discount drug and other retail stores to customers who will usually use discount processing and printing and may not get optimal color balance and sharpness from this film. But then, maybe those customers won't notice the difference, which raises the question of why they should bother with this emulsion if that is the case.

Similar Products Used:

Most all other Kodak and Fuji color negative emulsions.

OVERALL
RATING
5
VALUE
RATING
5
[Aug 17, 2004]
Matt_OSU
Beginner

Strength:

Good colors Good grain Available anywhere (almost)

Weakness:

price !!! (not the price I paid for, but huh, when I look around at the average price, it is between 6 and 9 dollars!)

I purchased a box of Kodak MAX 400 and these two rolls came with it for free. I had the occasion to go on a trip to Grand Canyon and other National Parks, so it was the perfect time to test my different rools.

Similar Products Used:

Kodak MAX 400 Kodak ROYAL GOLD 100,200,400 Fuji REALA 100

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
4
[Jun 04, 2004]
pontifex bmp
Intermediate

Strength:

-nice grain (the fact that there is so little) -nice colors (what you see is what you get)

Weakness:

-pricey (almost as much as some pro-film) -skin tones (not a fan of the the skin color, but soem people like it)

i have used this film alot. it is very easy to find (ie drug stores, walmart ect) when you need it.

Similar Products Used:

-to much kodak stuff to name -to much fuji stuff to name aswell

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
4
[Apr 04, 2004]
ugi
Intermediate

Strength:

sharp neutral colors

Weakness:

extra-pale skin tones price

All in all I'm glad Kodak has put this film out on the market, as it's a big improvement over Kodak Max (though a big increase in price as well). It's price is pretty much the same as Royal Gold always was - not quite consumer, not quite pro. I found this film to be very sharp and neutral in color, more neutral than Fuji Superia (though not as much 'pop'). Low contrast. Skin tones seemed smooth and gentle. A little TOO gentle actually, to the point where it took away from the natural color in people's faces and rendered them more ghostly pale than they are in real life. At the same time, it emphasizes the pink in people's skin. Still, these effects are subtle, and I could see the film being used at weddings and such. I had these printed at a familiar pro lab on Kodak Royal paper.

Similar Products Used:

Fuji Superia X-tra, Agfa Vista, Kodak Royal Gold, Kodak Max

OVERALL
RATING
4
VALUE
RATING
4
[Mar 03, 2004]
ras1500
Intermediate

Strength:

Accurate color and good detail.

Weakness:

Not enough experience with product to find a weakness.

From the previous reviews people either love this film or hate it. I tried one roll of mostly indoor flash shots (I'm documenting the rebuild of a car engine). Frankly, I thought the film performed rather well. The prints were 4x6 proofs processed at a pro lab on Fuji equipment. Colors were accurate and when viewed with a 7x magnifier there was a lot of detail in the prints. I still prefer Portra 400UC for a 400 speed film, but High Def will do in a pinch and it's more readily available than Portra.

Customer Service

Not required

Similar Products Used:

Fuji Reala, Kodak Portra 400UC

OVERALL
RATING
1
VALUE
RATING
4
Showing 1-10 of 29  

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