

Leverkusen version also referred to as ISOPAN IF 17, marginal markings L IF
1932 BLACK AND WHITE 1 YEAR OLD PHOTO PROFESSIONAL
1932 BLACK AND WHITE 1 YEAR OLD PHOTO FULL
Trading of materials however continued between plants.Īgfa AG (Leverkusen), which saw major investment post war in 1952 as a wholly owned subsidiary of Bayer was subsequently merged with Gevaert based in Mortsel, Belgium in 1964 to form Agfa-Gevaert with Bayer subsequently acquiring full ownership of the merged company. After 1964 films from Wolfen were rebranded ORWO (ORiginal WOlfen). To distinguish them, the film edge markings were L IF for Agfa Leverkusen, and W IF for Agfa Wolfen. Initially both companies produced films under the AGFA brand with the same names, such as Isopan F. After the war, Agfa was split into two companies: Agfa AG, Leverkusen in West Germany, and VEB Film und Chemiefaserwerk Agfa Wolfen in East Germany. By 1925 under IG Farben, Wolfen was specialising in film production and Leverkusen photographic paper. The Wolfen factory was established in 1910 and the original Leverkusen works around the same time. Originally founded in Berlin, 1867, its name was changed to AGFA (Actien-Gesellschaft für Anilin-Fabrikation) in 1873. The replacement film SCALA 50 is based on modified Agfa-Gevaert Aviphot Pan 80 Ī "creative" C-41 colour film, designed to intentionally give unpredictable results with skewed colours.

A near alternative to the discontinued AGFA SCALA.Final stock sold out in late 2020/early 2021. Same film as the Silvermax but rebranded to show its suitability for reversal process. īlack and white reversal (slide) film Make Final stock sold out in late 2020/early 2021. SCALA was the same film but packaged to promote its suitability for reversal. The film was produced as a single run using end of line Agfa base material and photochemicals in 135 format only. After the closure of Fotokemika in 2012, ADOX subsequently revived the KB100 film as ADOX CHS II.īlack and white negative film Makeįine grain ortho-panchromatic film on a clear triacetate base similar to original AGFA APX 100. Fotoimpex established the ADOX Fotowerke GmbH film factory in Bad Saarow outside Berlin to convert and package their films, papers and chemicals. This included the Efke films from Fotokemika which were sold branded as 'ADOX CHS Art' re-uniting the ADOX name with the original Schleussner film formula. The current rights to the ADOX name for photographic products were obtained in 2003 by Fotoimpex of Berlin, Germany, a company founded in 1992 to import photographic films and papers from former eastern Europe. Ortho-panchromatic classic 1950s emulsion. KB = 'Kleinbild' (Small format 135), R = Rollfilm. Ortho-panchromatic classic 1950s single layer emulsion. In the 1970s Dupont the new owners of the ADOX brand sold the recipes and machinery of the film (but not the brand name) to Fotokemika in Croatia who continued to produce the films according to the 1950s ADOX formulas under the Efke brand. In the 1950s it launched its revolutionary thin layer sharp black and white kb 14 and 17 films, referred to by US distributors as the 'German wonder film'. Schleussner GmbH of Frankfurt am Main, the world's first photographic materials manufacturer.

2.2 Black and white reversal (slide) film.
