The Last Roll: Kodachrome's Final Days

On December 30, 2010, a retired National Geographic photographer drove to a small photo lab in Parsons, Kansas, and handed over the last roll of Kodachrome ever made. This is the story of how a film that colored seven decades of American memory — Paul Simon songs, moon landings, family Christmases — quietly ran out of world.

The Last Roll: Kodachrome's Final Days
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On December 30, 2010, a photographer drove to a small lab in Parsons, Kansas and handed over a single yellow canister. Thirty-six frames. The last roll of Kodachrome ever manufactured. This episode follows that film from its unlikely birth in 1935 — invented by two classical musicians tinkering with chemistry in hotel rooms after rehearsals — through seventy-five years as the defining color medium of American visual memory, and finally to the afternoon a lab in a town of ten thousand people drained its chemistry tanks and turned off the machines for good.
Kodachrome was more than a product. It was the specific warmth of holiday slides projected on a living room wall, the exact green of a soldier's uniform photographed in Normandy in 1944, the particular quality of light in the world's most famous portrait of a girl in a refugee camp. When it ended, something about how Americans remember the second half of the twentieth century ended with it. This episode is about what that loss actually means — and what's still sitting in closets, waiting to be held up to the light.

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