Phil_F_NM
Camera hacker
Goodness gracious, just release it, Kodak. A lot of us want to start buying it up by the several thousand foot length and sticking it in our 16mm cameras!
Phil Forrest
Phil Forrest
Although they stubbed their toe with lousy scans, the rest is good news for transparency fans. Alas, I am no longer among them.
kodakBringing back a new version of a former film from our portfolio has been keeping us very busy. We’ve been sourcing the 80 unique components used to manufacture EKTACHROME and reformulating and optimizing the recipe for smaller scale runs. We’ve also rebuilt the factory infrastructure, as well as EKTACHROME E-6 processing workflow.
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Now we’re ready to share a first look at our latest, and very successful, wide coating trial that occurred at the end of June. Here are Kodak’s Image Scientists examining the test sheets from this coating run. The objective of this trial coating was to replicate the previous smaller coating results at production-scale. This meant coating a 6,000 feet x 4 feet roll of EKTACHROME film that will then be cut down in the finished sizes of Super 8, 16mm @kodak_shootfilm and 35mm x 136 still film.
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We will be sharing more of our journey with you as we get closer to the availability date this Fall. So, stay tuned! For the latest progress from the film factory, media coverage and product release information, visit kodak.com/go/ektachrome
Kodak is in very dire straights, having announced the possible sale of their flexigraphic printing business, the one part of the company that is growing. Every other part of Kodak is either stagnant or declining. Kodak has 400 million dollars in debt coming due in less than a year. They have no ability to roll it over, now that the company has shrunk every year since the last bankruptcy. The only solution it seems is to sell off the one part of the company that is growing.
Notice that we no longer hear about the Kodak Coil ICO that was supposed to occur in January, but has been endlessly delayed since then. Another bad sign.
They better get this film out while they still can. These are not good times. Investors have punished EK's stock harshly the past quarter, down over 35%. It has been a relentless spree of liquidation that continues to this day.
Kodak-Alaris which is the company bringing back the Ektachrome film is not the same company as the Eastman-Kodak that Ted is talking about. The financial pressures on Eastman Kodak are irrelevant to Kodak-Alaris.
But surely Alaris (based in the UK) is NOT a part of Eastman Kodak? Or am I mistaken?
Cheers,
R.
Kodak-Alaris which is the company bringing back the Ektachrome film is not the same company as the Eastman-Kodak that Ted is talking about. The financial pressures on Eastman Kodak are irrelevant to Kodak-Alaris.
Edit: Kodak Alaris makes color paper, RA4, but that is not the topic at hand in this thread.
I haven't shot E-6 in years. I found an older roll of 120 Velvia 50 in my fridge that was a few years out of date. I stuck it in my $15.00 Yashica 124G and took some pics of a Revolutionary War reenactment. Wow! I was amazed at the rich colors and depth of the pics. I will be trying this new Ektachrome, and some more Velvia, in the months ahead.
Jim B.