Want to try slide film but don't know where to start? Let us break it down for you simply!

Slide film is also known as reversal film or positive film. It refers to film that, after E-6 processing, directly develops a positive image on the film itself—one that matches the real scene's colors and brightness levels exactly (no negative inversion).
Common reversal films include:
FUJIFILM lineup: VELVIA 50, VELVIA 100, PROVIA 100F
KODAK lineup: E100 (Ektachrome E100)

Tips for shooting slide film:
1. Light must be clean—avoid changeable overcast or mixed sunny/shady conditions.
2. Exposure must be accurate—don't randomly overexpose or underexpose to compensate.
3. The more vibrant the colors, the more fun it is: skies, seas, neon lights all look incredibly clean and punchy.
For beginners, try these:
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KODAK E100:Clean and transparent, with neutral and realistic colors.
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FUJI VELVIA 100:Highly saturated and vibrant colors, perfect for landscapes.
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FOMAPAN R100: A unique black-and-white slide film with stronger light-and-shadow flavor—light and shadow are the soul.

1. Light and shadow are the soul
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Preferred light: Strong and directional natural light (e.g., side lighting on a sunny day).
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Avoid mixed light sources — color temperature chaos will throw off the color balance.
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Shoot scenes with strong color contrast (e.g., blue sky paired with red walls) — slide film’s vibrant characteristics will make the photos pop straight away.

2. Exposure is critical
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Slide film has significantly lower exposure latitude than negative film, so both overexposure and underexposure will noticeably degrade image quality with virtually no forgiveness—unlike negative film, where slight overexposure often still yields a usable and viewable result.
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When shooting slide film, metering must be extremely accurate every single time!!!

3. Subject choice makes all the difference
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Color slide film: Skies with clouds, water reflections, glass/metal highlights—these best showcase the transparency and layering of slide film.
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Urban night scenes with neon tubes or intense colorful street views—slide film makes the light, shadow, and colors stand out even more.
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Black-and-white slide film shines in these subjects! Architectural lines, geometric shadows, high-contrast light/dark scenes—dramatic effect is off the charts.

