Since I posted about my film stash the other day, it has now grown from 168 rolls to 189 rolls! I did mention in that post that I had 15 rolls on their way to me but, as I was also given the opportunity to buy some more, I did…
It’s all colour 120 format film: 10 rolls of Ektar, 5 rolls of Portra 160, 3 rolls of Ektachrome E100, 2 rolls of Portra 400, and a single roll of Velvia 50. It was also all better than half-price (although some of it is just past expiry), which was why I bought it despite knowing how much film I already have.
Most of it will be frozen and not used until next summer comes around, but I hope to be able to shoot some of it this autumn if favourable weather and free time align. We shall see, I guess.
Today’s picture used the sum total of zero frames from my stash, being a digital photo, but I quite like the cluttered double-exposure-style image that was visible both through, and reflected in, a bar window. My shadow self is in there too! 🙂
A few years ago I took an inventory of all the film I had and created an Excel spreadsheet so I would know how much film I had, of what type, and how old it was. Over time the data began to slip when I forgot to update the inventory upon shooting a rol or acquiring more. I’ve been meaning to update it for a while now, and today was the day.
It turns out I have a lot of film. One hundred and sixty eight rolls (or, in the case of 4×5, boxes) to be exact. And I have fifteen more rolls heading my way next week! This has been acquired since I started predominantly shooting film again around 2016. I bought a bit here, a bit there, but clearly at a greater rate than I manage to use it.
The breakdown is as follows:
45 rolls / boxes of black and white film
88 rolls / boxes of colour negative film
35 rolls of colour reversal film
The breakdown by format is:
35mm – 86 rolls
Medium format – 78 rolls
4×5 – 4 boxes – apart from one these are not full ( a couple of them only have 6 sheets remaining)
The majority of the film in the stash is also expired. a few rolls are several decades old, but most is quite recently expired and, as it’s been refrigerated or frozen, should be perfectly fine to use still, although I am conscious of the fact that it ain’t getting any fresher either!
The breakdown of expiry by decade is:
1970s – 2 rolls
1980s – 5 rolls
1990s – 9 rolls
2000s – 24 rolls
2010s – 19 rolls
2020s – 76 rolls
Unknown expiry – 7 rolls
In date – 26 rolls
What this exercise tells me, is that I ought to stop buying any more film and shoot what I have. To be fair on myself, this is what I’ve been doing but, unless I start using a motor drive, it’s a slow process and likely to be curtailed sometimes when I need to buy film that I use often (such as 400asa black and white like HP5+ or Tri-X) or, thankfully less frequently, when I see a deal on film that is worth taking advantage of (as is the case with the 15 rolls I have coming soon).
But the stuff I already have, well I need to start making a better effort to go and shoot it, particularly in the case of the much older stuff (some more Expiriment posts, perhaps?), but also with the stuff that I perhaps hold onto because I see it as precious, maybe because it is no longer in production, or perhaps because it is expensive. I have a tendency to hold onto this film while I wait for the perfect conditions to shoot it, conditions which rarely occur. While I don’t want to waste film on throwaway photography, I do need to be less prescriptive on where and when I will shoot film that is getting longer and longer in the tooth.
I’m fortunate to have acquired such a stash – I could shoot a roll a week for over three years and not run out – but I really want to see it reduce somewhat. Maybe I’ll gift a few rolls as Christmas presents, but what I really need to do is get out and shoot some of it!
This is just the stuff in the fridge. I also have an entire drawer in the freezer (which I suspect my wife would like to be able to store food in…)!