
Kodak Gold 200 – Expired 35mm Color Film (24 Exposures)
Kodak Gold 200 – Expired 35mm Color Film (24 Exposures)
This is a 35mm roll of Kodak Gold 200, likely produced in the 1990s, with a 24‑exposure count and consumer‑grade color negative emulsion. As a ISO 200 daylight‑balanced film, it was originally designed for everyday shooting in good light, offering medium grain, warm color rendition, and wide exposure latitude for casual snapshots and family photos.
Because this roll is expired, you can expect more pronounced grain, color shifts (often warmer tones or slight magenta/green casts), and increased contrast, especially if it has been stored at room temperature rather than refrigerated. Many shooters rate expired Gold 200 at a lower effective speed—around ISO 100 or even ISO 50—and compensate in development to pull more detail out of the shadows.
This cartridge is standard 35mm C‑41 process color film, compatible with most minilabs and home C‑41 kits. With 24 frames, it’s a good option for testing how your camera handles and experimenting with the character that expired consumer film brings—unpredictable hues, vintage‑style contrast, and a more textured, nostalgic look in your scans or prints.