Huss
Veteran
I would not know. It is, however, the ultimate marketeering company: buy low - add hype - sell high.
They also manufacture film. Unless they market it how will anyone know?
I would not know. It is, however, the ultimate marketeering company: buy low - add hype - sell high.
If credible it'll be one of the very few (if not the only) new color negatives released in years. And they actually deliver. Light years beyond the empty promises and bloated prices from some more "reputable" manufacturers I say.
This film will probably be like all the other Lomo films. They will go through what they have and you will never see it again.
I think it’s more incredible that you have an issue with something that does not exist.
We get it, you hate Lomo. But that’s ok because they have now hit 50% of their goal with the campaign only being a few hours old!
If you are willing to spend $10.50 on a roll of defective film, does it really matter if it is 24 or 36 exposures?I have however no problem calling them on bone headed blunders. Imagine going to a site that offers 35 mm color negative film for $10.50 a roll, but nowhere on the page does it mention the number of exposures per roll.
If you are willing to spend $10.50 on a roll of defective film, does it really matter if it is 24 or 36 exposures?
Imagine going to a site that offers 35 mm color negative film for $10.50 a roll, but nowhere on the page does it mention the number of exposures per roll. Instead you have to message them to obtain that information.
That doesn’t seem odd to you?
.
Last but not least (and specifically directed at anyone), haters are going to hate.
If you are talking about Ferrania, they started from scratch, and they are actually manufacturing film themselves. The only thing Lomo manufactures is hype.
What seems odd to me is that for some reason you keep repeating this even though Lomography clearly states that its film is 36 exp on its kickstarter site.
All you have to do is read. But I get it, keep on this bizarre tirade. From its store for the first 35mm film listed:
https://shop.lomography.com/en/films/35mm-film/lomography-color-negative-800-iso-35mm-3-pack
Additional Information
SKU f836c3
Film Format 35 mm
Film Type Color Negative Film
ISO 800
DX code No
Development C41 Color Negative Processing
Exposures 36
Pack Size 3
Once The new film is in its store and not on KickStarter, it will be the same. Plus there was no messaging needed. On the Kickstarter site it mentions the film size. Facts n stuff.
Exactly. Amusingly this is quite predictable from the curmudgeons.
And film.
From Skiff several posts above:
Yes, because the color rendition is unique. Probably from the same factory which is producing the Lomo Purple and Turquois for Lomo: When Lomo Purple was introduced they published some pictures from inside the factory. And on the machines the name of the factory was printed: InovisCoat (in Germany)
http://www.inoviscoat.de/
That are former Agfa engineers using former Agfa machinery. They build a new factory about a decade ago.
They are also producing the negative film base for Polaroid films and the Bergger Pancro 400.
And from casualphotohpile.com:
When contacted by a representative from Lomo regarding coverage of this new film, the first question we asked was if this film truly is a brand new emulsion. Over the past few years the film community has seen numerous supposedly new films hit the market, but these are typically repackaged versions of old expired film, or pre-existing film products not readily available to the end-consumer (they’re business-to-business products for use in surveillance cameras or in the medical or scientific sectors, etcetera). While there’s nothing wrong with these boutique films and we love shooting them, it’s always more exciting when a truly new and unique product comes to market. And LomoChrome Metropolis is in fact a brand new film. Lomo has been developing it for a number of years following the 2014 release of LomoChrome Turquoise.
“The demand for both of our LomoChrome films has been extremely high and we could tell that the film community is eager to try new things and experiment even more,” our contact at Lomography told us. “So we took the risk and time to work on another new emulsion.”
Until Lomo buys InovisCoat, they don't manufacture their own film. Pretty simple really.
Lomo films have low expectations. It doesn't matter if blues are purples and there is no red. One gets the impression that Inoviscoat can throw whatever emulsion left overs they have onto the film and Lomo will buy it as long as it makes some kind of an image. i am saying this toungue in cheek of course, but you pretty much can't believe what they say.
It is a film. If you think you'd like it, buy it. No need to argue about it on the internet. People have different opinions. Get over it.
Nobody else could sell it at that price. Buy lots of it and count me out.nobody else is doing it