35mmdelux
Veni, vidi, vici
Kodak's single biggest mistake was the elimination of KODACHROME-
Kodak's single biggest mistake was the elimination of KODACHROME-
I think their biggest mistake was their bullsh!t business model with all those proprietary film format cameras, then PhotoCD, then the patent harassment stuff. I'm glad the film is out of their hands and into the pensioner's.
Kodak's single biggest mistake was the elimination of KODACHROME-
Yes if they'd killed it in 1990 instead of keeping it alive long after it became a flea on the back of a flea, less money would have been wasted.
They made some massive mistakes keeping KK 30 years after people stopped using it is only a little one compared to:
Ripping off Polaroid and having to pay royally
The Disk camera
Advantix
Not being the first to have production digital cameras
Strongarming the minilabs and losing industry trust.
Going from the biggest digital camera seller (2005) to deleting their whole line (2011)
etc,
etc
A few friend of mine are preying for the return of EBX not a big slide shooter myself but they keep giving me rolls of Agfa Precisa, one has given me projector and screen so maybe i should shoot more
You should indeed: With slide projection (with a good projection lens) you get by far the best picture quality at big enlargements.
Unsurpassed brillance and detail rendition. It is impossible to get such a great quality with digital projectors (their resolution is extremely low, and their color rendition is worse compared to slide projection; furthermore they are extremely expensive)
or with prints from color negative film.
But back to the topic, the Kodak Alaris statement:
Do we really see a change here?
Well, now the Kodak Pension Plan is the owner of the 'Personalised Imaging Business', which is responsible for photo film.
But:
The management is still the same!!
The management of the Personalised Imaging Business has not changed!
The same people who were responsible for the downturn of Kodak photo film in the last years are still responsible now at Kodak Alaris.
The same people who are responsible for the production stops of all the beloved films,Plus-X, T-Max 3200, BW 400 CN 120, Ultramax 800, and especially the whole Ektachrome line, Kodak's best films.
And the same people who for years now are refusing to do marketing for film.
Can we expect a significantly better performance from the same people, who made all these mistakes in the past?
And another important aspect:
Kodak Alaris is mainly a digital company, their main focus is on digital products like the photo print stations in the drugstore chains. They say this quite clearly in their statement.
Photo film is only a minor part of their business.
So, to be realistic, we should not expect too much from Kodak Alaris.
It is definitely not the real new beginning we all have hoped for.
Cheers, Jan
Not really. People stopped buying it. Does this give you a clue as to why they stopped making it? See also Photosmith's comment.Kodak's single biggest mistake was the elimination of KODACHROME-
You may have misunderstood what you have. From my reading this is a black and white film, so E6 will probably strip the emulsion off the film. Yes it can be reversal processed -- but not in E6.Just had some film delivered today from Germany that can be shot as negatives or slides (Orwo UN54) so some will be sent off for E6 developement
You may have misunderstood what you have. From my reading this is a black and white film, so E6 will probably strip the emulsion off the film. Yes it can be reversal processed -- but not in E6.
Cheers,
R.
They made some massive mistakes keeping KK 30 years after people stopped using it
Just had some film delivered today from Germany that can be shot as negatives or slides (Orwo UN54) so some will be sent off for E6 developement
Then in 1989 came Velvia and quickloads...
KK was dead from that point.
Well, yes. And: E6 films surpassed Kodachrome in quality already in the beginning 90ies. And then with every improved new E6 emulsion the advance / quality lug for E6 films compared to Kodachrome got bigger and bigger. Much better colours (more natural, more precise with films like Provia, Sensia, Astia ,Elitechrome, E100G etc; and more saturated colours with films like Velvia and E100VS, EliteChrome Extra Colour). And E6 films surpassed Kodachrome significantly in fineness of grain, resolution and sharpness (lots of scientific tests proved that over the years). The better quality and better lab infrastructure of E6 have been the reasons for the decreasing sales of Kodachrome. Honestly, Kodak had made lots of mistakes. But the production stop of Kodachrome was unavoidable. Kodachrome was not competitive anymore. But they are to blame for their completely stupid marketing campaign against E6, which they started at Photokina 2008. If you do marketing against your own products, of course you don't have to wonder about decreasing sales. Their whole E6 policy was a catastrophe. They intentionally damaged a unique part of the photo culture. Cheers, Jan
Can you please educate me on what the kill E-6 campaign was about?
~Stone | Sent from my iPhone using Forum Runner
Dear Jan,No problem:
They've run advertizing campaigns in which they have recommended that photographers should stop using reversal film, and should use Kodak negative film instead. . . . What a stupid behaviour.
A film manufacturer who is intentionally destroying a part of his own market with stupid and counterproductive marketing. . . .
Kodak could have told that to their customers and could have strengthened their slide film sales. . .