Fujifilm Velvia 50

The landscape photographer's holy grail — unmatched color saturation in a slide film.

E-6 Slide Film ISO 50 E-6 FUJIFILM Variable Stock

Color Palette

Maximum saturation — the most vivid film ever made

Specifications

Full NameFujifilm Fujichrome Velvia 50 Professional (RVP 50)
ManufacturerFujifilm (Japan)
Film TypeColor reversal (slide film)
ISO Speed50
ProcessE-6
GrainExtremely fine — virtually invisible with outstanding sharpness
Exposure LatitudeVery narrow (~1/2 to 1 stop)
ContrastHigh
Available Formats35mm, 120, 4x5

Reciprocity Failure Calculator

When exposures exceed one second, Velvia 50 requires additional time to compensate for reciprocity failure. Fujifilm's official specification notes correction begins at 4 seconds, but the formula below provides a safety margin by applying correction above 1 second.

Corrected time: seconds
corrected = metered1.25

Reciprocity exponent sourced from Fujifilm technical data

For all 22 films, see the reciprocity calculator.

Push & Pull Processing

Slide film has an extremely narrow exposure latitude of approximately 1/2 stop — far less forgiving than negative film. Push and pull processing with E-6 is possible but significantly more challenging than with C-41 or B&W films. Even small adjustments in development will noticeably affect contrast and color saturation. Bracket your exposures and communicate clearly with your lab.

RatingEffective ISOStopsNotes
EI 3232−2/3Pull ½ stop — slightly lower saturation, more shadow detail
EI 50500Box speed — optimal Velvia saturation and contrast
EI 4040−1/3Many photographers prefer EI 40 for a slight safety margin
EI 100100+1Push 1 stop — increased contrast and saturation; usable

With slide film, even 1/3 stop of exposure error is visible. Bracketing in 1/3 stop increments is strongly recommended, especially for critical landscape work. A handheld incident meter or a dedicated metering app like TLR Companion is essential for consistent results.

Character & Personality

Grain

Extremely fine grain with outstanding sharpness. Velvia 50 features one of the finest and sharpest grain structures of any color slide film. The grain is virtually invisible, producing images of remarkable clarity and detail. The combination of ultra-fine grain and high resolving power makes it legendary for detail-critical applications like large-format landscape photography.

Exposure Latitude

Very narrow — approximately 1/2 to 1 stop of total usable range. This is the tightest latitude of any film in this guide, and it is characteristic of slide film in general. Accurate exposure is essential. Slight underexposure (1/3 to 2/3 stop) produces the most saturated results and is the preferred approach for landscape work. Overexposure quickly destroys highlight detail with no recovery possible. Many photographers shoot Velvia at EI 40 to add a slight safety margin. Unlike color negative film, which tolerates 3–5 stops of overexposure, slide film demands precision.

Color & Tonal Character

The most saturated and vivid color rendering of any film ever made. Velvia 50 produces intensely vivid greens, rich blues, and deep, luminous reds. The saturation is far beyond what any color negative film produces. Contrast is high with a neutral gray balance and extended detail in highlights and shadows when exposure is precise. The current RVP 50 formulation is said to be slightly milder than the original 1990 version, but it remains the most vivid slide film available. The “Velvia look” is one of the most imitated aesthetics in digital photography.

Best Suited For

  • Landscape photography — the definitive landscape slide film
  • Nature and wildlife photography
  • Macro photography (flowers, insects, close-ups)
  • Outdoor scenes with strong natural color
  • Any application where maximum color impact is the goal

Available Formats & Pricing

FormatApprox. Price
35mm (36 exp)~$18–25 USD
120 (5-pack)~$70–90 USD
4x5 (20 sheets)~$80–100 USD

Velvia 50 is the most expensive 35mm film currently in production. E-6 processing adds approximately $10–15 per roll on top of the film cost. Prices as of early 2026.

Development & Processing Notes

E-6 process only — Velvia 50 is not compatible with C-41 labs. E-6 processing is becoming increasingly rare and expensive. Many photographers mail their film to specialized E-6 labs rather than relying on local processing.

The tight exposure latitude means bracketing is strongly recommended for any critical work. For long exposures above 4 seconds, reciprocity correction becomes necessary per Fuji's specification. Pushing 1 stop increases contrast and saturation further, while pulling 1/2 stop slightly reduces saturation for a softer look.

Slides should be stored in cool, dry conditions to prevent color fading over decades. The medium is archival when stored properly — slides from the 1990s still retain excellent color.

Shoot Velvia 50 with TLR Companion

TLR Companion is a free light meter app with built-in reciprocity correction for Velvia 50 and 21 other film stocks. Precise metering is critical with slide film — load Velvia as your active film and the app will automatically correct your long exposures. Track every frame on your roll and never lose count again.