Agfaphoto APX 100 Professional - 135 - 36 is a medium-speed black and white negative 35mm film with a nominal sensitivity of ISO 100. This film can be used universally and is suitable for a variety of applications in the field of indoor and outdoor photography in bright light. APX 100 delivers high-quality images.
Agfaphoto APX 100 Professional - 135 - 36 is a medium-speed black and white negative 35mm film with a nominal sensitivity of ISO 100. This film can be used universally and is suitable for a variety of applications in the field of indoor and outdoor photography in bright light. APX 100 delivers high-quality images.
in 3 offers
The lowest price for AgfaPhoto APX 100 Professional Black and White 135-36 Negative Film 1 Roll right now is $10.49 at pandacamera.com, compared across 3 retailers.
The all-time low was $8.06 on 17 Mar 2026 — today's price is 30% above the lowest ever. It has been notably cheaper before — worth setting a price alert.
Prices last updated 29 June 2026.
AgfaPhoto APX 100 Professional Black and White 135-36 Negative Film 1 Roll
Agfaphoto APX 100 Professional - 135 - 36 is a medium-speed black and white negative 35mm film with a nominal sensitivity of ISO 100. This film can be used universally and is suitable for a variety of applications in the field of indoor and outdoor photography in bright light. APX 100 delivers high-quality images.
Agfaphoto APX 100 Professional - 135 - 36 is a medium-speed black and white negative 35mm film with a nominal sensitivity of ISO 100. This film can be used universally and is suitable for a variety of applications in the field of indoor and outdoor photography in bright light. APX 100 delivers high-quality images.
Last updated at 29/06/2026 22:17:55
AgfaPhoto 6A1360 APX Pan 100 135/36 Film
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AgfaPhoto APX 100 - 36exp, 135/35mm Black & White Negative Film
Delivery $12.74
Agfa APX 100 135/36
Delivery $41.27
originally posted on bhphotovideo.com
AgfaPhoto Agfapan APX 100 Black and White Negative Film (35mm Roll Film, 36 Exposures) - Have recently returned to film photography and couldn't be more pleased with this one. Great all around film. Also like that it's modern day manufactured film and not the expired film one was forced to use.
originally posted on analoguewonderland.co.uk
Just like AgfaPhoto APX 400, this one is equally brilliant film. I love all these small, visible details. Shadows, contrast, it's flexibility with any weather condition. Wonderful purchase.
originally posted on analoguewonderland.co.uk
I tried my first roll of APX 100 on a sunny day in January while in the wonderfully atmospheric Brompton Cemetery. I was delighted with the results - beautiful fine grain, a nice balance, capturing fine detail as well as producing punchy blacks. I shall definitely be shooting some more rolls.
| Variant | |
| size | 1 Roll |
AgfaPhoto 6A1360 APX Pan 100 135/36 Film
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
AgfaPhoto APX 100 - 36exp, 135/35mm Black & White Negative Film
Delivery $12.74
Agfa APX 100 135/36
Delivery $41.27
AgfaPhoto Agfapan APX 100 Black and White Negative Film (35mm Roll Film, 36 Exposures) - Have recently returned to film photography and couldn't be more pleased with this one. Great all around film. Also like that it's modern day manufactured film and not the expired film one was forced to use.
Just like AgfaPhoto APX 400, this one is equally brilliant film. I love all these small, visible details. Shadows, contrast, it's flexibility with any weather condition. Wonderful purchase.
I tried my first roll of APX 100 on a sunny day in January while in the wonderfully atmospheric Brompton Cemetery. I was delighted with the results - beautiful fine grain, a nice balance, capturing fine detail as well as producing punchy blacks. I shall definitely be shooting some more rolls.
After doing a search on Flikr to see how other people had shot APX100, I decided to try it out myself. I tried it in a Yashica Campus rangefinder (introduced 1961) and a Praktica MTL50 from the late 80s. After shooting, I developed the films in Ilfosol 3 then scanned on a Plustek 8100. I would class the film as medium contrast and medium grain (though I am new to home developing, so better results may be possible). For the price, I am very happy with the quality.
Used a Rollei 35 camera on a swelteringly hot day in Peel Isle of man on Sat 17thDeveloped in HC110 dilution !:31 for 10 min.The images are good and show a gritty appeal grain is visible. This may be due to the developer I don't knew for certain. The film produces consistent results a a sufficiently high qualify when exposed correctly, The extremely bright light may have confused the metering on the Rollei slightly or it may have been the heat confusing me. It is certainly a film I would return to and recommend to others
I got a new point and shoot and used a roll of this to test it out. The lighting came out nicer than I expected and I love the balance of detail and grain, it gives a very classic film look in my opinion. I loved how portraits came out too. It worked well outside, inside, and at night. I would definitely recommend!
I was impressed with it's low grain quality but it came out quite flat. That's not necessarily a bad thing if you like grainless flatter images, but I couldn't get on with the film.It is cheap, so give it a go, but it isn't FP4.I developed in Ilfosol which may acciunt for some of my issues but a lot of my negatives came out as a bit of a flat mess. I does seem to cope with tonal ranges though, but that is likely due to it's overall flatness. I'm sure someone could pull out some gems using digitial technqiues and maybe if you're looking for a flat base images with a fairly good dynamic range...this is the film for you?
Writing this review was an excuse to re-examine the shots I took on APX 100 and I was reminded of its qualities. I like the grain, the way it handles tone and its latitude, and it's pretty sharp with good contrast. The frames I've posted were stand developed in Rodinal 1+100. This emulsion would be worth 4* at any price and for only 10-15% more than other budget films from Kentmere and Fomapan, it's a bargain.My one quibble is with the PET film base used: it's stronger, though thinner, than an acetate base. This has advantages, but makes handling less easy--for example, it slips in my scanner's film holder.But overall this is a very pleasing film that's well worth trying.
I bought a few rolls of Agfa APX 100 while I was on vacation in Paris. I was so impressed by the results (and the cost-to-quality ratio) that I bought more of this film from B&H. Nice results with fie grain a good latitude. Develops easily in Film Photography Project's Super Monobath deveoper/fix combo. Looking forward to shooting this in my Agfa cameras for the full Agfa experience.
This is my first roll tested at box speed in D76. The grain was noticeable on my prints, but it's not unpleasant. I may be spoiled by t-grain films with regards to grain, but even Foma 400 appears finer and smoother than APX 100. It definitely has its uses in industrial or otherwise gritty photography.
| Variant | |
| size | 1 Roll |