Dear John
This is slightly off topic, but are you telling me you can not import a new Morgan to the US?😡
I really would not use a Hassy for candids. In fact I can honestly say it does not get much use, but i would never be without it.
Regarding mail order, yes this is how things have become. I am already anxious about black and white and probably do not want to get into the colour print game. Incidentally however good a malt is, you always know that there are plenty more barrels in some dark store room waiting to be bottled 🙂. Not sure the same applies to dark room colour supplies.
best wishes
Richard
Richard,
Morgans have been "banned" from import to the US for more than 30 years. At first, I think, it was "safety" issues back when they were trying to make all bumpers crash proof, etc. Are the frames still Oak?
Now, there are all kinds of specs, for the type and markings on glass, to lights, bumpers, etc. There might an exemption because of low numbers of manufacturer, but as I recall, these are not very common, though for some reason they let the Mini's in.
I think the numbers on MG's and other Brit cars show the majority were sold in the US, have no idea on the Morgans, they always seemed to be more exclusive if only for the small numbers, still I used to spot one occasionally.
As to the supplies, if chemistry becomes tight, I still have supplier contacts and sets of balances from teaching chemistry, and I see the folks in the far off places, such as Prague, and I suspect Japan as well, are still quite serious about silver.
I do not worry much about color, RA4 printing, as a lot of digital is printed on RA4. I think it is better, and from the start digital paper was more expensive than silver paper.
Hand print darkroom work for at least the last 50 years was a niche market, and it was subsidized by the manufacturers who profited largely from amateur demand for film in general. 15 years ago Agfa B&W tech support told me that B&W was far less than 1% of their film business, but they kept suppling the niche, by choice.
Those who will supply that niche-- Forte, Foma, Ilford, Fuji, Efke, Berrger, etc., should continue long enough to keep us from having to coat our own papers, I hope.
Hey, I still miss the Ansco, old Bergger, old Oriental Seagul, Neobrom and Dupont papers.
I once had 5000 sheets of my favorite paper coated, cut, and shipped by air freight to me by Neobrom. I think the plant is still sitting there in Brno, if we could just get enough RFF members to buy it---- They had even Silver Iodide contact papers, photo linen, and probably more than a dozen other types of paper. They used to include test strips.
Former manager got his Mercedes and moved on. I offered to market their papers in the US, but yet I had to hire an exporter to get the stuff shipped, they could not even figure how to ship to the US.
IMO, they would be a viable Niche marketer today, if they so wanted it.
Foma is still a bit awkward in their exporting, I was part of Foma USA, a minor part, and they cut off their first US importer at the first sign of difficulty with Kodak.
Regards, John