drewbarb
picnic like it's 1999
The packaging waste buying factory film bothers me, too. I try to recycle as much as I can, but it gets tedious ripping apart 100 tiny film boxes to flatten all the cardboard- and sometimes the recycling pick up won't take the plastic film cans.
When I was in high school I bulk loaded much of my film; I used Watson and Lloyd loaders. I found that after three to five uses the cassettes became unreliable. The felt traps get dirty, the tops get loose, etc. I bought plastic or metal re-loadable cassettes, whatever was cheaper when I needed more. Mostly my film was fine- though occasionally I did have trouble with scratches. I stopped doing it during the 90's, when it seemed the cost of bulk loading vs. buying factory rolled film was basically negligible, but the way film costs are going up these days, it's starting to make sense again.
Now, I do as aparat suggests and use discarded cassettes picked up for free from my local mini-lab. I inspect the felt traps before I load them. Mostly they are fine; they have only been used once, after all. Besides being free, it's a cool way to recycle- at least the cassettes are getting used twice rather than only once before they get thrown out, or hopefully recycled themselves.
I still have my old bulk loaders, but since I have a darkroom, I just cut and load the film in the dark. No more worries about scratches from the loader, and the last frames on my rolls aren't exposed during loading.
Anyway, not spending on loaders or cassettes helps keep the cost down- and the reduction in packaging is a good thing, too.
When I was in high school I bulk loaded much of my film; I used Watson and Lloyd loaders. I found that after three to five uses the cassettes became unreliable. The felt traps get dirty, the tops get loose, etc. I bought plastic or metal re-loadable cassettes, whatever was cheaper when I needed more. Mostly my film was fine- though occasionally I did have trouble with scratches. I stopped doing it during the 90's, when it seemed the cost of bulk loading vs. buying factory rolled film was basically negligible, but the way film costs are going up these days, it's starting to make sense again.
Now, I do as aparat suggests and use discarded cassettes picked up for free from my local mini-lab. I inspect the felt traps before I load them. Mostly they are fine; they have only been used once, after all. Besides being free, it's a cool way to recycle- at least the cassettes are getting used twice rather than only once before they get thrown out, or hopefully recycled themselves.
I still have my old bulk loaders, but since I have a darkroom, I just cut and load the film in the dark. No more worries about scratches from the loader, and the last frames on my rolls aren't exposed during loading.
Anyway, not spending on loaders or cassettes helps keep the cost down- and the reduction in packaging is a good thing, too.