One would think the demand for 35mm and 120 would be far greater than sheet film.
I'm curious though, what film does the motion picture industry use?
I'm curious though, what film does the motion picture industry use?
sazerac....the digital thing has already taken off...
as the phone cameras improve...can you imagine the resolution they will have in a few years?
Film is mostly for us oldsters who love the process of it all, yes the pic is valued but it's the doing, not the having.
A lot of it is Kodak Vision emulsions, and I believe Fuji is still in that business.One would think the demand for 35mm and 120 would be far greater than sheet film.
I'm curious though, what film does the motion picture industry use?
When was the last time anyone here saw someone shooting an 8x10 view camera?
Keith,
I'd rather be a consistent film shooter that will keep using film the rest of my life than a spur of the moment one.
And I strive to instill that to anyone who are intrigued by my still shooting film.
A hundred people shooting one roll a week will be much better than thousands doing rose-tinted, GAS induced, one roll stint to "try" film.
You and I got started almost at the same time, what is your rate these past years? I hope much higher than mine 🙂
I agree with the OP. There are many options. Discontinued films are dicontinued for a reason. I don't shop at WalMart so could care less if they sell film or not.
I quit scanning film when I saw the results from my enlarger. Stock up as time goes on and enjoy.
When was the last time anyone here saw someone shooting an 8x10 view camera?
Yet, this is still available. Not to mention 70 other sheet film skus at B&H...
Not worried about 35mm film going away.
Film ain't dead. They'll have to kill me (and from what it sounds like) a bunch of other people first. I ain't dead, yet.
Yes I keep up with your blog. 🙂 Great work!
That's about 60 rolls per year, isn't it?
I have consistently averaged 1 roll per week for the past 5 years.
Well, we just need a hundred more of people like you encouraging others to shoot film. 🙂
Thanks for the inspiring story.
Oh, and get yourself an old 6x4.5 folder so the next time some cocky student came along, you can pull it out, and point to the wall size photo you printed from it. 😎
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Enough of this mourning about your favorite film being discontinued.
Enough of this complaining about the cost of developing/scanning/etc.
Enough of this worrying about whether we'll have film or not and extrapolating statistics from ebay used camera sales while pontificating about collecting vs using.
Today is a good day for us who love to shoot with film to show that we actually care about film's future. We still have plenty of choices and plenty of film. It is up to us to keep film available, and enjoy it while doing so. I don't know about you, but I have the full intention to let my daughter shoot film when she grew up if she chose to.
If your favorite film disappeared from the market, it's time to try out other emulsions and coming up with a new method to achieve the images you like. Miss Plus-X? Try FP4+, or Adox CHS 100, or the new APX 100. Be creative!
If developing in the labs are expensive with unsatisfactory results, develop yourself at home. It's safe, cheap, and fun. Be daring!
If scanning is expensive when outsourced, get a scanner. Plustek has several new models available, don't sweat the quality differences, get to know your tools and make the best of it. That's how masterpieces came to be. Be resourceful!
If film is expensive in your area, band together like-minded souls in your town/city and order bulk, from USA, from Germany, from Japan, whatever it takes. Be enterprising!
Let's roll!
* forgot to put up a soapbox first. oh well...
However, the continued existence of color film hinges on the motion picture industry, so 8x10 is a bit of a red herring.
Maybe, but Kodak is not set up that way. They have a specialized production line for film. If Hollywood dried up, would they really invest money to retool their paper coaters, for the benefit of a few still photographers? It's an open question.And from a technical point of view it is no problem to coat film and paper on the same coating machines. Most manufacturers (Agfa, Ilford, Foma,Fotokemika, Lucky...) have been doing that for decades.
Fact is that even without color movie film there is still a huge mass market filling the capacity of bigger coating machines.