Box for 120 film

😱I bought 3 more of the 35mm boxes from Japan Camera Hunter. Not cheap

I have the Adox tubes for the 120 film But really like to have the film well packed together in a "brick". Saves a lot of space and keeps stuff organized.

I cannot help that they are not cheap. I had to make the moulds and pay for them out of my own pocket. They were expensive. I actually made no money on the first 2 batches of cases. I did it for the love of film. I want to cut the price, I really do, but then I would actually lose money, which goes against all business sense.
 
Yes, I am making these next year. 120 size, based on the originals.

Just for reference though, that is actually my picture that you have out on flickr. I would prefer it if you took it down and instead linked one of my pictures. Thanks

I cannot help that they are not cheap. I had to make the moulds and pay for them out of my own pocket. They were expensive. I actually made no money on the first 2 batches of cases. I did it for the love of film. I want to cut the price, I really do, but then I would actually lose money, which goes against all business sense.

[SATIRE] That's the problem with the internet. It's so easy to get things like photos for free; why can't I just get the physical stuff for free too? [/SATIRE]
 
I cannot help that they are not cheap. I had to make the moulds and pay for them out of my own pocket. They were expensive. I actually made no money on the first 2 batches of cases. I did it for the love of film. I want to cut the price, I really do, but then I would actually lose money, which goes against all business sense.

I know, making molds in very expensive!

Could you make the 10 roll 135 case taller to accommodate 120 / 220?
That could save you at least half the tool cost (the lid remains the same ;-)
 
Could you make the 10 roll 135 case taller to accommodate 120 / 220?
That could save you at least half the tool cost (the lid remains the same ;-)

I did some measuring and came up with the idea that an "extension-ring" between the 35mm case and the lid would do the job. It would probably want a criss-cross frame (to match the dividers in the bottom of the 35mm base) for rigidity and rattle-reduction.
 
I did some measuring and came up with the idea that an "extension-ring" between the 35mm case and the lid would do the job. It would probably want a criss-cross frame (to match the dividers in the bottom of the 35mm base) for rigidity and rattle-reduction.

There you go, off to a good start on reengineering the design.
:angel::angel::angel:
 
My box looks like this:
fuji-astia-100f-120-5-pack-.jpg

It's light, it folds flat when empty and when it wears out, I simply replace it with the next one!

Can't see what all the fuzz is about? 😎
 
Nope not sturdy enough to pack in a bag for extended travel. A specially when the film has been exposed.

Exposed film is wound taut and stored in a plastic bag that comes with 100ft. bulk rolls. Thick, black plastic that will not let any light in. Next, in the Billinghams front pocket until we get to the hotel/apartment. Again, no weight and no clutter! And still no money spent! 😎
 
I reuse the cardboard boxes that contain 120 and 220 propacks.

The black plastic bottles get saved as well, as from 120 "Lucky" film. Also I seem to recall that the original Tylenol black bottles (before the big Tylenol scare) were plentiful for a while, and I picked up a ton of those very cheaply.

That thing Porter's is closing-out at 99 cents looks alot like a bar-soap storage box to me. Should be fine for four rolls of 120.
 
The 3D printer will be crippled once it really catches on by some kind of hardware DRM. The way I see it working is that, in the future, folks are going to own the digital rights to everything, and you'll end up paying a fee for most anything that is not totally original when you print it on a 3D printer. Digital rights assignment will probably become part of the patent process.

Cory Doctorow has a wonderful story on that theme, "Printcrime"

Thanks for the mail.
I am going to be making the cases next year. They will be available then.

If I may suggest, please make them in quincunx (staggered like a honeycomb, not rectilinear). This will be more space-efficient and more robust as well.

I once had a pair of Acratech aluminum tubes for 120, machined out of solid aerospace grade aluminum billets. Those were expensive at $13 a piece but could probably survive global thermonuclear war. Unfortunately I gave them to a friend's photographer wife as a birthday present, and when I went to reorder a set for myself, found they were discontinued. What's more, she divorced my friend a year later.
http://web.archive.org/web/20060924...?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=AOS&Product_Code=12FC
 
Back
Top Bottom