Stirring the pot again? Good luck…
I may be wrong, but from reading posts on this site over many years, I get the impression that photographers in the USA are far more dependent on gadgets and chemical additives than us folk in Europe. Would you agree?

Stirring the pot again? Good luck…
I prefer to be shaken, not stirred. I do use those new-fangled Magicubes once in a while.

Can you clarify? What kind of gadgets? Where in the photographic process would the chemical additives (and of what kind) come in?gadgets and chemical additives
Also, I do see a temporal pattern in that there's a growing cottage industry of gadgets, apps and even chemistry that has emerged over the past 10-15 years. This mostly has to do with the combination of low barriers to entry for new sellers/producers; you can start selling stuff all over the world without much of an investment, right form your own attic or cellar. Combined with globalization of supply, this has made it possible for private individuals to import bulk chemicals, have electronics manufacturing work performed at low cost for small batches, and many other aspects of industry that used to be reserved for larger business entities.
Who can tell?
It may be that the respective memberships of posters on APUG/Photrio tend those ways, but it isn't clear that that is representative of how the different worlds differ.
I do know that my dropping into FADU from time to time reveals a world that is a bit more similar to the photographic retailers and groups that I was around in the 1970s and 1980s than Photrio is, but I think that simply tells us more about who posts on the two sites.
Certainly trying to make something cool happen, it’s a lot more anticlimactic than I was expecting. Lots of sending emails and waiting for replies (if they come). Having better luck with 120, 35mm is proving to be a lot more difficult because perforators are not easy to come by.I see your endeavor with the repackaging of 'odd' (not meant in a derogatory way) film as representative of a cottage industry that's growing within the analog photography domain (and others). I also see this as evidence that the barriers to market entry for small-scale players are relatively low at this point. On the other side of the supply-demand system, there appears to be considerable interest in trying many things out.
This is actually a constant source of frustration for folks like myself. Nearly every forum out there has some sort of policy that banishes any content deemed "commercial." Except there actually isn't a more acceptable place for us to actually discuss any of our projects. As such, we can't post about things anywhere near as often as we'd like to.At this point we see so many of them pop up that they are starting to pose a challenge for Photrio as well as we have to re-think the divide between regular forum contributions/discussions and commercial activity, with the lines between these two frequently blurring as new players announce their products here on the forum or engage in pre-commercial market research. While this was quite rare only a few years ago, presently it's an almost weekly occurrence where we see new market entrants register on the forum and attempt to engage with the community for getting new products out there, or gearing up to do so.
I wish I had been told this was a thing before, I hadn’t realized it existed until I got pinged in the 122 thread. I’m sure a lot of my classifieds posts would probably fit better there.@dkonigs thanks for offering your perspective and this is indeed the kind of consideration we also run into - but then from 'our end of the deal', so to speak. We're working on accommodating something. A preliminary approach can be found here: https://www.photrio.com/forum/forums/sponsored-content.10/ This place is intended for folks like yourself to post about new developments etc. However, please bear in mind that this is kind of a stop-gap measure as we're also working on a restructuring of the forum that IMO would allow us more easily to navigate this grey area. In any case, I/we hear your pain and it's something on the forefront of our minds.
I wish I had been told this was a thing before, I hadn’t realized it existed until I got pinged in the 122 thread. I’m sure a lot of my classifieds posts would probably fit better there.
The trick is to hot shower the Big Mac before you eat it.No ... We don't all like McDonald's, Alan. When I take hot shower after eating a Big Mac, there's the smell of styrene. Talk about chemical additives! All their sauces are pumped in through ports on the side of the building from big tank trucks. Gosh knows which end of the truck the frying oil comes from! Around here, if someone wants a "clean" fresh fast food burger or fries, they go to In N' Out instead. But the worst of the worst is Jack in the Box; I suspect their frying oil comes from the LaBrea tar pits.
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