Fujifilm Superia 100

Vivid Fuji color in a fine-grain package — discontinued circa 2009

C-41 Color Negative ISO 100 C-41 Process FUJIFILM Discontinued

Color Palette

Rich, vivid naturals — balanced Fuji rendering

Specifications

ManufacturerFujifilm (Japan)
Film TypeColor negative
ISO Speed100
ProcessC-41
GrainFine for a consumer film — benefits of ISO 100 speed
Exposure LatitudeGood — handles 2-3 stops of overexposure well
Color PaletteRich, vivid — enhanced color realism with natural skin tones
Available FormatsDiscontinued — was 35mm only

Reciprocity Failure Calculator

When exposures exceed one second, Fujifilm Superia 100 requires additional time to compensate for reciprocity failure. This calculator remains useful for photographers shooting remaining expired stock.

Corrected time: seconds
corrected = metered1.25

Reciprocity exponent from Fujifilm technical data

Push & Pull Processing

Superia 100 was designed for box speed shooting in bright conditions. As a consumer film, push and pull processing were not commonly done. Given that remaining stock is heavily expired, overexposing by at least one stop per decade since expiration is strongly recommended.

RatingEffective ISOStopsNotes
Pull −225−2Very flat, extremely slow — impractical
Pull −150−1Smoother tones, may help expired stock
Box Speed1000Normal development
Push +1200+1Slight grain increase, slightly punchier
Push +2400+2Noticeable grain, not commonly done
Push +3800+3Significant quality loss — not recommended

Character & Personality

Grain

Fine grain for a consumer film. At ISO 100, Superia 100 produced clean, smooth images with good detail rendering. The lower speed allowed for a cleaner, smoother result than the faster Superia variants. At standard print sizes, grain was essentially invisible.

Exposure Latitude

Good — handled 2-3 stops of overexposure well. Some users reported great results even at 3-4 stops overexposed. The latitude was wide enough for reliable results in point-and-shoot cameras, though the slow speed limited its use to bright daylight conditions or flash photography.

Color Palette

Rich, vivid colors with enhanced color realism and natural skin tones. The film featured refined sharpness and accurate reproduction of difficult colors like violets and greens, even under fluorescent lighting. The color palette leaned toward the characteristic Fuji cool tones but with slightly warmer rendering than the faster Superia variants. This combination of vivid color and fine grain made it a sleeper favorite among the Superia lineup.

Best Suited For

  • Outdoor daylight photography
  • Landscape photography in good light
  • Travel snapshots in bright conditions
  • Studio photography with flash
  • Collectors and expired-film enthusiasts

Available Formats & Pricing

FormatApprox. Price
Expired stock (35mm)$20-40+ USD (collector pricing)

Available only as expired stock on the secondary market. Stock is increasingly rare. Current as of early 2026.

Development Notes

Standard C-41 processing — no special handling required beyond standard expired-film precautions. For expired stock (all remaining stock is 15+ years expired), overexpose by one stop per decade since expiration. Very old stock may show significant color shifts and increased fog, especially if not cold-stored. Cold-stored stock holds up better, but results are increasingly unpredictable with stock this old. Fujifilm discontinued Superia 100 around 2009, making it one of the longest-discontinued films in this guide and one of the hardest to find.

Sources & Further Reading

Manufacturer Data

Sample Photos

Reviews & Resources

Shoot Fujifilm Superia 100 with TLR Companion

TLR Companion is a free light meter app with built-in reciprocity correction for Fujifilm Superia 100 and 21 other film stocks. Meter your exposures accurately with camera-specific settings for 48 TLR cameras.