Harman Phoenix II – My first roll and some brief thoughts on the development of this new film

By Hamish Gill

Harman have just announced the release of their second colour film, Phoenix II. As per the last few releases out of the factories in Mobberly, I have been lucky enough to have received a few rolls to shoot and write about in the run up to the official announcement. This new film has launched in both 35mm and 120 formats, but so far I’ve only managed to shoot a roll of 35mm in time for this launch article, so you’ll have to wait a week or so for my 120 results (I have 1 shot from my first roll left in the Makina 67 at the moment)…

Phoenix II is the second iteration of colour film from Harman and replaces the first version entirely, that is to say, the original Phoenix film is set to effectively be discontinued – though they do say in the literature they sent out about Phoenix II that they “may decide to coat this film again in the future if there is significant interest”. In short, if you like the original, I would be inclined to go out and buy a whole load of it to both demonstrate the demand, and indeed make sure you have some in stock for a bit in case they don’t make it again!

If you followed the story of the first Phoenix film you will know that as a film stock, it subtlety improved in quality over its lifespan. This is a product of the fact that these films are a part of Harman’s experiments in creating a brand new colour film. Like the original, Phoenix II is a stepping stone in the development of a new film. It is not yet designed to be perfectly colour-accurate, rather it is a iteration of their process toward a new colour-accurate film and as as such should be considered as an “experimental” film – it is even marketed as such. In short, the colours etc are a bit whacky, and the film might see subtle changes to how it performs throughout its production run.

Now, the first Phoenix film really was whacky, so much so that the results from it varied quite dramatically from one persons results to the next. This was sometimes due to how the film was shot, how it was developed, sometimes how it was scanned and indeed sometimes how it was post processed on peoples’ computers – or possibly indeed a product of all of the above variables. With that in mind, you should probably take the results I have achieved with Phoenix II as simply indicative of what you might get, rather than what you will get if you shoot a roll of this film.

With that said, Phoenix II definitely seems to be a step toward a more conventional colour film. There’s still a good bit of halation (which I quite like sometimes), and the colours this time seem to have something of a propensity toward emphasising greens. It does though seem to be a little more effective at dealing with scenes that present a wider range of highlights and shadows. Grain seems to be a little more in line with what you might expect from a consumer colour film of this speed too.

Phoenix II is DX coded and marketed as a 200 speed film, as I shot my first roll at EI200, but the literature that came with the film indicated that best results are achieved at between 100 and 200, with certain shooting conditions benefiting from it being shot at slower speeds. I suspect I need to experiment a little more to determine exactly what is meant form that statement.

I think this is a really interesting development from Harman that shows potential for more varieties of colour film from them in the future, perhaps even a much more colour-accurate film. I have read occasionally that some people in the wider film photography community have issue with Harman selling a product that isn’t a final iteration of their development plans. Personally, I can’t really understand the logic of that perspective. For one, there is a proven market for “experimental” films – it seems a pretty sizeable percentage of film photographers today enjoy the idea that some film stocks can give them unconventional results. With that in mind, the simple business decision to release iterations of a film stock that will sell, and therefore will help the continued development of the film, is what seems much more logical to me – especially in the context of a world where there are already more colour-accurate films currently available. With that said, I do think – at least given the time to continue to develop their colour-accurate film, that Harman should return to manufacturing these more experimental films in the future. They aren’t really the sorts of films I like to shoot particularly regularly, but it strikes me that if there is a market and demand for them, they should attempt to respond to that demand – at least if it makes financial sense for them to do so.

Phoenix II is available now with a target retail price of £12.99 a roll – this is the same price the original was announced at back in 2013 and will be available at least until they release their next iteration.

If you would like to find out more about Phoenix II you can do so on their website harmanphoto.co.uk as well as on various social media platforms @harmanphoto – once you get your own roll, they are also encouraging the use of hashtags #phoenixfilm2 and #harmanphoenix2

My first roll was shot with my Leica M4-P, Omnar 50mm F2 Bertele and was developed and scanned by Analogue Wonderland (where it is also available to purchase – whilst stocks last, at least…) – I have subtly, but not particularly heavily tweaked my results in Lightroom too.

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About The Author

By Hamish Gill
I started taking photos at the age of 9. Since then I've taken photos for a hobby, sold cameras for a living, and for a little more than decade I've been a professional photographer and, of course, weekly contributor to 35mmc.
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Comments

Ibraar Hussain on Harman Phoenix II – My first roll and some brief thoughts on the development of this new film

Comment posted: 16/07/2025

This is looking to become a very fine film at some point
Hats off to Harman for developing this and using the time to assess how it changes and also the results from the photographs taken by consumers
Skin tones are lovely - pretty much nailed
It seems to be fine grained and with good tonal separation
Sure it loves greens and pinks but the colours are actually pleasant
It is amazing that they’re spending R&D time and money in developing a completely new film

Thanks Hamish
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Paul Quellin on Harman Phoenix II – My first roll and some brief thoughts on the development of this new film

Comment posted: 16/07/2025

Interesting read Hamish. So we go from red to green... or do we? I ran another roll of Phoenix recently and I had thought to myself I would be using an improved version of the emulsion I had first tried a while back. Reading your article made me realise that this may not have been the case. I ended up in a photographic shop in a nearby town and I went in there only because I wanted some HP5 in a hurry. They didn't have any, but they did have some Phoenix... so I purchased a 120 roll. I paid well over the odds for it and maybe that should have told me something. I suppose it should have told me it probably doesn't turn over quickly at that price, so it may well have been from an early batch. I never thought to keep notes on box markings and production dates, to make comparisons. In this case I suspect I shot two rolls on exactly the same stock of this developmental film. Good to see your results here, to use as a benchmark.
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Scott Ferguson on Harman Phoenix II – My first roll and some brief thoughts on the development of this new film

Comment posted: 16/07/2025

Thanks for this, Hamish!
I shot a roll or two of Phoenix back in Canada and hated it, but I was getting my processing done at a friend's home lab, so I'm not sure whether running it through a professional lab would get improved results. I'm usually not a fan of companies that use the public to "beta test" their products, having had some experience of this nature with a Red Camera system in the early teens, and a Tesla (which I sold in 2022 -- I wasn't quite an early adapter, but I was definitely an 'early abandoner' when I saw where Musk was heading and how he treated his human labor force). But in Harman's case, it feels like they are being transparent about what they are doing, and since film photography is a small market "connoisseur's" medium, I'm all for anything that makes it possible to expand and develop the creative options available to us. Coming up with a real alternative quality color film seems like a great thing to me. Who else is in the game these days besides Kodak or people who are repackaging Kodak like Cinestill (which I like)? I've read that even Fujifilm has gone over to repackaging Kodak films -- is that true? Anyway, the new Phoenix looks like it's going to be better than the old Phoenix, so might be worth trying a roll at some point. Thanks for this and I look forward to the 120.
Cheers,
S
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Lance Rowley on Harman Phoenix II – My first roll and some brief thoughts on the development of this new film

Comment posted: 16/07/2025

Excited to try this, you can definitely see the green cast haha. One other thing I noticed is that the shadows aren’t crushed, which was a problem with version one. I got some great shots of fall foliage last year with version one but even overexposing a stop the shadows looked a little muddy. That doesn’t seem to be the case with version two.
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Keith Drysdale on Harman Phoenix II – My first roll and some brief thoughts on the development of this new film

Comment posted: 16/07/2025

I have watched two videos on Youtube today on this film and I found your article to be very helpful. I never tried out Phoenix "One" because I didn't like what I saw in other photographers' results, but this new generation looks a lot more useable, especially to an oldun like me with a very limited budget which doesn't really allow for experiments. I'm not doing much colour at the moment, but I think this stock will be included in the next batch when I start again.
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Keith Drysdale replied:

Comment posted: 16/07/2025

ps: I think the look is a bit reminiscent of 1980s Fuji 400.

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