They just re-introduced 110 film:
http://www.lomography.com/
They may attract the hipster crowd and sell quirky cameras for too much money, but they do a lot to keep analogue alive.
Btw, last weekend I bought a Pentax 110. Talk about coincidence.
Hi Ronald,
yes, they do indeed a lot to keep film alive.
They are the only ones who have a marketing strategy, and who are really making strong efforts in marketing.
The lack of marketing from the others, who earn their living by selling film, photopaper and photochemistry, is one, if not
the
major problem of the market.
Freestyle, B&H, digitaltruth, Silverprint, Firstcall, AG-photographic, labo-argentique, fotohuis, Maco, Fotoimpex, ars-imago, Riegler, Puntofoto and all the specialised dealers.
They do nothing for film marketing. How stupid!
If you want to sell film, you have to do marketing for it. You have to get new, especially young people to get interested in it.
These companies have to wake up!
Probably we as their customers have to give them a 'stark' kick in their ass.
Lomograpy alone can not save film. There is more necessary.
Besides much much more action from the spezialised dealers of course we have to do our part:
1. Shooting more film.
2. Shooting all types of film: Color-reversal, BW-reversal, color-negative, BW-negative.
3.
Now is the time to shoot film! Digital can wait, film can't. It has to be supported now.
4. Spread the word. Show your film pictures and film based cameras to others and get them interested.
If every film shooter convince two other guys to shoot film as well, then film is stabilised.
It is not difficult. Everyone is able to do that.
As to the Lomo 110 film:
I guess that is the product of a cooperation between the LSI and Adox. AFAIK Adox ist the last company having the machinery to convert 110 film.
If this first run is a success we will probably see 110 color film and 110 Lomo cams in the future.
Cheers, Jan