Will 1970s COLOR film still work?
In this episode of Will It Develop, we crack open a roll of 1978 Agfacolor Special—a rare color negative film from the golden age of analog. Once a rival to Kodak, Agfa pioneered early dye-coupler chemistry that changed color photography forever. But can a 45-year-old film still deliver an image? 🎞️ Developed, shot, and scanned by TCC Film 📍 Los Angeles | Archival Film | Analog Revival #WillItDevelop #Agfacolor #VintageFilm #FilmPhotography #C41 #LostMedia #KodakVsAgfa #AnalogFilm #tccfilm

▶︎
Europa brennt - Politische Unruhen, Bürgerkriege und Krieg

▶︎
The rise and fall of Art Deco

▶︎
Getting the Best From: Rodinal Part 1

▶︎
Why Your Film Scans Suck

▶︎
Stunning Technicolor Masterpieces You Need To Watch

▶︎
What Makes Black & White Photos Powerful

▶︎
Adam Savage's One Day Build Shot on 35MM Film!

▶︎
Unusual Objects from Jacks Youth

▶︎
My Thoughts On The Fender Controversy

▶︎
I've Shot Film Since 2010. Here's What's Changed.

▶︎
You've Never Seen a Real Photo

▶︎
Why Movies From The 70s & 80s Look Like This: Kodak 100T 5247

▶︎
Making Film Reveal its Image: the B&W Development Process (Photography Part 2)

▶︎
I Bought B&W Film on TEMU So You Don't Have To!

▶︎
William Eggleston Fixed Digital Photography’s Biggest Flaw

▶︎
Ranking Every 35mm Film Stock

▶︎
How IMAX 70MM Film is Projected!

▶︎
How to take an analog photo | SWR Handwerkskunst

▶︎
Start Darkroom Printing (What You Actually Need)

▶︎
