kiev4a said:
This may already have been addressed but I was at Wally World the other day and discovered their film display has shrunk to about 1/3 its previous size. There also is less choice of film with much of the display devoted to disposable film cameras. No longer any Tri-X offered, either. Wallgreen also has cut back on film and, of course, now only offers the house brand and Kodak.
Both these chains have very active on-site one-hour labs. Seems a little strange to restrict the availability of film when you have a film processor. Or maybe they are trying to encourage folks to go digital so they won't need the processing equipment any more.
Looks like within a few years we'll all be ordering film on line if we live outside the major urban areas.
Yes, I believe it is symptomatic of the film phaseout. We did have this discussion a week or so ago, but it was a contentious thread about WHY we are seeing a reduction in the amount of film available for retail sale, rather than noting what's happening from a historical perspective and discussing what we're going to do about it.
I have also noticed - Walmart has shrunk their film displays in my area also - some of the reclaimed shelf space now belongs to single-use film cameras; it seems there are a lot of those displayed. My local Walgreens, in addition to running film sales on their house (Agfa) Studio 35 film, has done away completely with Fuji brand film and now sells only Kodak. Walmart sells "Polaroid" brand, which is relabeled Agfa as well, I understand.
With Agfa gone by the end of the year, that will be *it* for Polaroid and Studio 35 house brands, I guess. Unless they make nice with KonicaMinolta or Ferrania, which might happen. I'm guessing that they are clearing them out entirely, so watch for further deals on the house brands. If they say they are made in Germany, they're Agfa of one type or another.
Both Walgreens and Walmart seem to have done completely away with slide film of all sorts. There is C41 color from ISO 800 to ISO 200 (the ISO 100 seems to be gone too), C41 Monochromatic film, some limited APS film, some 110 (wow). Until a few months ago, I could still buy Tri-X in my local Walgreens, but that's gone now.
I believe that the reason you're noticing very busy one-hour labs and much less film for sale has two main reasons:
One - people who have not yet made the economic decision to jump to digital are now using single-use cameras, and they're blowing those out by the truckload.
Two - those who have gone over to digital have found that they can have prints made up quickly and easily at the traditional one-hour place. Note that all the one-hour places have lots of NEW equipment - and all of it can do film/digital, including receiving downloaded internet orders. I print that way at the local Walmart myself all the time. Upload my scanned negs (or digital files from DSLR) and pick them up at Wally World. Works great, is cheap. I can even have them printed at the Wally World nearest my friends and family and THEY can pick them up locally, saves shipping and time. Very cool.
On a side note - I had seldom seen KonicaMinolta (formerly Konica) color print film for sale in the USA at the retail level. They just didn't have much market penetration here. Same for Ferrania (Solaris, truly a crappy film the last time I tried it, but available in 126 carts and 127 for guys who love the really old stuff). Now here lately, I am seeing KM C41 print film showing up with online retailers, and I'll take a SWAG and say that we'll be seeing that brand in retail stores soon.
Why? If film is dying, what's up with that?
I think it is because as film sales began to stagnate and fall over dead, Kodak and Fuji reacted as quickly as they could, but poorly in general. Now they are racing to get ahead of the trend, and in some minor ways, they may have done it - now for a brief period of time, demand may outpace supply for 35mm color print film at the retail level. Enter KM and Ferrania for their 15 minutes of fame before the lights go out. That's just in the USA, don't know what it is like elsewhere.
That's my take on it, anyway. Lot of companies pay top dollar for market analysis like this.
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks