Roger Hicks
Veteran
Read J. K. Galbraith's "The New Industrial State".. . . 40 year marketing background . . . good company . . .
Cheers,
R.
Read J. K. Galbraith's "The New Industrial State".. . . 40 year marketing background . . . good company . . .
As long as they keep making Tri-X, I won't complain.
Best,
-Tim
Double X B&W film is what Eastman will be producing, that`s on Hollywood`s list of films they agreed to buy for a five year´s time period. About other, consumer Kodak films, I am not too sure about...But , "dream on, guys" that`s what life is for most people anyway.
^^^this^^^as long as they bring back kodachrome, I'm good.
Shouldn't that be the other way around ? You create a product to meet a demand.
The problem the film companies have had is demand dropped very quickly and trying to plan 12 months ahead without being able to know the demand in that timeframe is a challenge.
Buy a digital camera, it's obsolete within a year.
They still make the best film in the world. That;s all I needed to know 🙂
Maybe in general cases.
But film manufacturing industry is now a niche market that must be supported by people who choose to create the demand for it. I don't see how else it could survive.
If you have other models to suggest that would sustain Kodak Alaris, Ilford, Fuji and others to keep producing film and paper, please tell us about it.
Concentrate your business/purchases to one brand. In Europe it is Ilford/Harmann. That will assure them that it is worthwhile to push on with new batches and marketing. You have to realize that new master roll needs at least a year to ripen. The manufacturer has to be sure there is a market for it after it has ripened, sliced and packed and distributed.
Oh, boy. Read The New Industrial State by John Kenneth Galbraith and see if you still care to defend that assertion.The consumer always creates the demand, . . . .
If it "has to be Kodak" try Double X-Eastman 5222, it will be produced at least for five years, and readily available from Eastman movie stock distributors.Problem with that is that Ilford film, much as I like and use it, doesn't look like Kodak film. I am into photography for the images not the business plan.
Well, there is guys that go up in the stratosphere just to jump out and fall, not necessarily the most convenient way of getting "kicks"It wasn't ever convenient to haul wet plate cameras into the desert to photograph it.
So it's not all about convenience. It's also about the result.
Well, there is guys that go up in the stratosphere just to jump out and fall, not necessarily the most convenient way of getting "kicks"