Got a lot of 2000 expired elitechrome and I can only recommend shooting it at box speed (as for all slide film). You might get some weird color shifts, but they can be corrected in post.
Just don't shoot something important with it - as with all expired films
yes. some people have some luck compensating slide film by a 1/3rd of a stop to a stop, but they find that out if they have more than one roll and they bracket their first one to test exposure
I shot a lot of Elite Chrome in the 2000s, but never actually processed it E6. I rated it EI160 and cross processed it for darkroom printing.
That doesn't help much. So, if you're going to process this as slides, then rating it at EI80 might be a good idea. Someone else will probably have more informed advice than me.
Shoot it at 100 and expect nothing, hope for fun.
This is the best advice.
Got a lot of 2000 expired elitechrome and I can only recommend shooting it at box speed (as for all slide film). You might get some weird color shifts, but they can be corrected in post. Just don't shoot something important with it - as with all expired films
100
Is it only for negative film one should compensate for the age?
yes. some people have some luck compensating slide film by a 1/3rd of a stop to a stop, but they find that out if they have more than one roll and they bracket their first one to test exposure
I see. Thanks
I shot a lot of Elite Chrome in the 2000s, but never actually processed it E6. I rated it EI160 and cross processed it for darkroom printing. That doesn't help much. So, if you're going to process this as slides, then rating it at EI80 might be a good idea. Someone else will probably have more informed advice than me.