BLKRCAT
75% Film
picked up a roll over the weekend. Planning on making a video in the future about the film as a send off. I've shot the film a bunch in 120 but I never have shot it in 35mm, so that will be fun.
My Adorama's order from April 12 finally shipped today. Looks like they get shipment from Fuji.
John Sypal posted a story on IG, screenshot of some japanese article about Fuji possibly rethinking about Acros...
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FYI
https://www.en.finegrain.es/2018/03/this-is-why-fujifilm-and-agfaphoto.html
without machines no new film?
Oh please, not again this complete nonsense!!
Every statement in this text is wrong.
Jan, we have been speculating as such several times in this thread already. So if its wrong, this is the first we have heard of it.
Sorry; I thought you were both the same person. But yes, that link was posted here earlier and some have wondered if it was true but yours is the first post to tell us it is not.
You can also ask Super 8 expert Tak Koyama (who is converting fresh Provia 100F in S8 cassettes): He is visiting the Fufilm film factory in Tokyo almost every month due to one of his friends. And he says the factory is operating normally as in the last years.
And of course - visible for everyone - the boom in Fuji instax with millions of cameras sold each year. And a film production at full capacity. How to produce dozens of millions instax film packs every year without machinery?
The machinery theory IMO weakens quite a bit when you count that Integral film requires a negative film material, thus the emulsion and coating machinery still has a use.
Crazy would it be that they discontinue films to free up production space and slots, could have been the case with Peel apart?
We've talked about that here on rff in the past years, too. Every instant film, also integral instant film, has a negative film base. And this negative film is produced like any other negative film concerning emulsion making and coating.
For example the color negative film base of Polaroid Originals film is made in Germany by Inoviscoat. A company founded by former Agfa Germany engineers, which have built a complete new film factory in the town Monheim in 2008. They have bought lots of former film production machinery from the former Agfa plant in Leverkusen. Therefore Polaroid Originals film of today is partly made on machines on which up to 2005 the Agfa photo films were made.
Unlikely. Packfilm had to be discontinued because the demand has collapsed. The only relevant demand volume for packfilm had been professional photographers (studio test shots) and passport and identity card photographers. Demand from amateurs and enthusiasts has always been negligible in comparison to the professional demand.
Nonsense. The people I see...without fail...interested in pack are photographers/artists. Nothing to do with studio test shots or passports. Where the heck have you been?
You are welcome.
As I've written:
"The pictures from Tilburg were published online when the machines got for sale by an auction company some years ago."
These pictures have been quite often posted in several European forums and social media channels some years ago in preparation for the auction. The auction company wanted as much potential customers as possible.
Therefore you can ask all European film manufacturers about that, and they will confirm. Because they were either directly addresed or got the infos online.
Of course you can also ask the staff in Tilburg. The Fufifilm factory is still there in Tilburg, modernised and producing RA-4 photo paper (dozen of millions of m² p.a.) and lots of other materials like membranes.
You can also ask Super 8 expert Tak Koyama (who is converting fresh Provia 100F in S8 cassettes): He is visiting the Fufilm film factory in Tokyo almost every month due to one of his friends. And he says the factory is operating normally as in the last years.
And of course - visible for everyone - the boom in Fuji instax with millions of cameras sold each year. And a film production at full capacity. How to produce dozens of millions instax film packs every year without machinery?