bmattock
Veteran
Andy K said:But you still do not know it is a fact.
Yes, I do. I have proven it. It is a fact.
You cannot claim speculation as fact.
Anyone can claim anything as fact. However, facts are self-consistant and based in reality. I am not speculating. Speculation is based on incomplete evidence.
The only person I ever heard of who did that was David Brent. Fact.
You're mistaking a 'fact' for truth. It is a fact that gravity exists. There is no absolute proof for it (yet), but we all accept the fact of gravity. It is not a truth that gravity exists, because no one can yet prove that it works the way we think it does. Do you feel yourself floating away yet? I guess gravity is a fact, then.
The death of film for photography is a reality - nothing is going to change that - but it won't be a 'truth' until the day the last roll comes off an assembly line somewhere. If you prefer to call any prediction based on logic, observation, insight, intelligence, and deductive reasoning 'mere speculation' you certainly can do that - but in this case, you're just engaging in self-deception on a pretty big scale. Your choice, of course.
Film may be dead in the US, but not elsewhere. Personally I can't wait for Kodak to stop all film production because it means an even bigger slice of the pie for little old Ilford.
A bigger slice of a shrinking pie is not more pie. You didn't take geometry in school, did you?
Ilford *will* get a bump. And Foma, Forte, Efke, Lucky, Era, etc. But they don't make color film, unless I am greatly mistaken.
Fuji and Mitsubishi and maybe even Ferrania will inherit Agfa and Kodak's color business, *if* they are still in the game when Kodak exits. And of course that will bump their sales numbers up for awhile.
Meanwhile here in reality, consumer film sales are still declining 30% year on year. Eventually, they have a market for 100% of nothing. I guess that means they win?
Their sales increased when Agfa folded, they will increase when Kodak give up on photography too.
An corpse twitching once in awhile is hardly an optimistic outlook. It's that geometry thing again, huh? See, larger pieces of smaller pies are not 'bigger' - the numbers just make them look that way.
If film was to die, and that is very unlikely, that won't just be the loss of a hobby, it will be the loss of an entire artform.
A) It isn't unlikely, it is happening. I present reason and evidence. You just keep saying it is not happening. Who is deluded here?
B) And no, it won't be the loss of any entire artform.
If film dies there will no longer be an artform called 'photography', just a pale imitation called 'Photoshopping'.
If that's what you choose to call it, then yes. You can refuse to look at photographs, er, digital images, ever again if it makes you bitter to see them. Art goes on - technology changes.
You act as if digital photography will never get any better than it is right now, today. There is no reason to believe this; in fact, the evidence suggests that the digital photography realm is getting better and better in leaps and bounds. Prices keep dropping, image quality keeps going up.
Film is better than digital in almost every way. That will change in time. But regardless of quality - the market makes the decisions, not the desired quality. The best product doesn't win - the most popular one does. Pretending it is not happening doesn't change anything.
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks