Velvia
Brand of daylight-balanced color reversal film / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Velvia is a brand of daylight-balanced color reversal film produced by the Japanese company Fujifilm. The original incarnation of the film was called "Velvia for Professionals", known as RVP, a classification code meaning "Reversal/Velvia/Professional series". It is known for its extremely high level of color saturation and image quality.
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Velvia RVP[1] | |
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Maker | Fujifilm |
Speed | ISO 50/18° |
Type | Color slide |
Balance | Daylight |
Process | E-6 |
Format | 35mm, 120, 220, 4×5 in, 8×10 in, 13×18 cm, Super 8†, 16mm† †Third party |
Grain | RMS 9 |
Exposure latitude | ±½ stop |
Saturation | very high |
Application | Nature |
Introduced | 1990 |
Discontinued | 2005[2] |
Velvia 50 (Velvia II) RVP50[1] | |
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Maker | Fujifilm |
Speed | ISO 50/18° |
Type | Color slide |
Balance | Daylight |
Process | E-6 |
Format | 35mm, 120, 220*, 4×5 in, 8×10 in*, QuickLoad 4×5 in* *Discontinued[3][4] |
Grain | RMS 9 |
Exposure latitude | ±½ stop |
Saturation | very high |
Application | Nature |
Introduced | 2007 |
Velvia 100 RVP 100[1] | |
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![]() Fuji Velvia 100 film cartridge | |
Speed | ISO 100/21° |
Type | Color |
Format | 35mm, 120, 220, 4×5 in, 8×10 in |
Grain | RMS 8 |
Exposure latitude | ±½ stop |
Saturation | very high |
Application | Nature |
Introduced | 2005 |
Velvia 100F RVP 100F[1] | |
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Speed | ISO 100/21° |
Type | Color |
Format | 35mm, 120, 220, 4×5 in, 8×10 in, 9×12 cm, 13×18 cm |
Grain | RMS 8 |
Exposure latitude | ±½ stop |
Saturation | high |
Application | Nature |
Introduced | 2002 |
Discontinued | 2012 (Eur. NOAM)[5] |
Velvia (RVP[1]) was introduced in 1990.[6][7] It has brighter and generally more accurate color reproduction (though many see its high color saturation as unrealistic), finer grain, twice the speed, and a more convenient process (E-6). Kodachrome 25 fell out of popularity a few years after Velvia was introduced (in part because of Kodak's lack of interest in promoting their film); Kodachrome 64 and 200 followed more slowly. Kodachrome 25 had previously been considered the film to which all other films had been compared, and cannot fairly be compared to Velvia, as Kodachrome is an entirely different process, in which the image is produced with "color clouds" more so than grain.
Velvia has the highest resolving power of any slide film.[8][9] A 35 mm Velvia slide can resolve up to 160 lines per mm.[10]