>>4125137>film you are about to shoot soon (weeks to months)keep in a cold/room temp area (i keep it on the floor/bottom shelf)
>film you wont shoot for >3 monthsin the fridge or freezer in the original packaging (box+plastic canister or just inside plastic canister)
>film you just shottake the roll, put it in a tupperware container or the plastic canister with cap, then put that in a ziploc bag and put it in the fridge. when you want to get it developed, take the whole thing out of the fridge, and leave it somewhere not hot for a few hours (12+ is best). only after then, open the bag and take the film out. do not take the film out straight away. dont both putting it in the fridge if you are getting it developed in a day or so.
>negativesput them in archival quality sleeves, in a binder, in a shelf away from heat, moisture and direct sunlight
consumer grade film is extremely tolerant. there are stories of people leaving it in hot cars for months, developing it later and it coming out fine. you just dont want to do that all the time because its not optimal. i once shot a roll of film, left it on my bottom shelf for 3 months, developed it and it came out great.