Harry Lime
Practitioner
I spend $3 for C41 and $6 for hand BW.... Where do you go? I send it to Blue Moon In Portland
I'm currently living in Europe.
A roll of Portra 400 is about 6-7 Euros and developing runs 8-12 euros.
In the US Amazon sells 1 single roll of Portra 400 for $5.79.
Processing at my local lab back in the US ran roughly $8-10.
Tri-X or TMY2/400 is about 3.50 - 4.90 Euro a roll depending on where you buy it. I process all of my own b/w film so that part is very cheap.
Again, if you are shooting just a roll a week that's probably not going to break the bank. I average about 20 rolls a month of black and white and if I am shooting an event or something I'll use between 6 - 15 rolls a day. Most of these are self financed documentary projects and those numbers can add up quickly, if you are shooting C41 and sending it to a lab. Thankfully I mostly shoot b/w, so it's not as big a concern to me as it may be to others.
I have a $250.00 PlusTeck 35mm scanner that does up to 7200 dpi (native), I scan at 5000dpi that gives me 100mp TIFFs. You don't NEED to pay $1000.00 for a good scanner
No, offense but that scanner may be adequate for amateur use, but you are going to need a dedicated film scanner for serious work. I use a flat bed to make contact sheets of my negs, but the actual scanning is done on a 5000/9000ED or sent out to a lab with an Imacon.
Film is not dead. If anything it seems that the market has stabilized and even grown a little in recent years. But there are a few ingredients needed for the continued good health of the market. Affordable dedicated film scanners of high quality and a good supply of reliable and good cameras. People are only going to continue to shoot film if they have a camera to load it in to that will take pictures reliably and in an enjoyable manner and then be able to do something with them. In 2010 that means converting them from analog to digital.
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