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My sentiments exactly, Ken. While I hate to see anyone fold (a harbinger of the future we all do not want to think about), there remain other options. For my part, Dwayne's, too, gets the nod. These folks have always done a bang-up job with my (Koda)chromes as well as the small amount of E6 I have sent in. With the job they did on the final Kodachrome blitz, they have earned my everlasting gratitude as well as earned all my future E6 processing (I now shoot E100G and E100VS in 35mm and 2 1/4) . My processing "delay" is similar to yours (I am only an hour or so north - depending on the delay at the border and how fast I happen to be driving); I just accumulate enough film - generally 40 - 50 rolls - and send it in via UPS.![]()
My sentiments exactly, Ken. While I hate to see anyone fold (a harbinger of the future we all do not want to think about), there remain other options. For my part, Dwayne's, too, gets the nod. These folks have always done a bang-up job with my (Koda)chromes as well as the small amount of E6 I have sent in. With the job they did on the final Kodachrome blitz, they have earned my everlasting gratitude as well as earned all my future E6 processing (I now shoot E100G and E100VS in 35mm and 2 1/4) . My processing "delay" is similar to yours (I am only an hour or so north - depending on the delay at the border and how fast I happen to be driving); I just accumulate enough film - generally 40 - 50 rolls - and send it in via UPS.![]()
I'm a big fan of transparencies.
Tried and never liked A&I. Messed up my Kodachromes more than once. Sad when anyone walks away, but there are better mail-order options out there than A&I, IMHO and experience.
Dwayne's has never messed up my Kodachromes or E-6 and their turn-around service - at least for me - is blindingly fast. Only 43 hours (timed) between dropping into the mailbox and having the mailman place the finished slides into my hands. (I live outside the Seattle, Washington area.)
Ken
A and I didn't process kodachrome, they sent it out. I never had a problem with their work.
A and I didn't process kodachrome, they sent it out. I never had a problem with their work.
Let's see...Kodak killed their small batch E6 kit. Slide film selection is shrinking and prices are rising. The E6 processing options in my immediate area have all but collapsed. High film costs, high processing costs and high shipping costs plus pricey drum scans aren't helping me stay in love with E6 materials. I'm shooting up my stash of 120 E100GX. Hopefully, my go-to E6 lab here in Toronto will stay afloat but I've no plans on buying another roll.
I, and apparently others, seem to have no problem still finding available, affordable and fast mail processing services for E-6. Several, in fact, are APUG advertiser/sponsors. All you have to do is pick one (or two, or three) options and drop your film in the mail. Works for the rest of us. And worked with no complaints for decades back in the heyday of Kodachrome.
This is not really difficult, you know, unless you choose to make it so...
Ken
someone who sounds a lot like CGW said:It is now official. A&I has confirmed: slide film is dying
One more crippling bombshell hit the already beleaguered analog community when IDC confirmed that E6 market share has dropped yet again, now down to less than a fraction of 1 percent of all films. Coming on the heels of a recent survey which plainly states that slide film has lost more market share, this news serves to reinforce what we've known all along. slide film sales are collapsing in complete disarray, as fittingly exemplified by failing dead last in the recent film slaes numbers.
You don't need to be the Amazing Kreskin [amazingkreskin.com] to predict slide film's future. The hand writing is on the wall: slide film faces a bleak future. In fact there won't be any future at all for slide film because slide film is dying. Things are looking very bad for slide film. As many of us are already aware, slide film continues to lose market share. Red ink flows like a river of blood.
Kodak's slide film is the most endangered of them all, having lost 99.98% of its core users. The sudden and unpleasant departures of long time slide film developers A&I only serve to underscore the point more clearly. There can no longer be any doubt: slide film is dying.
Let's keep to the facts and look at the numbers.
Kodak states that there are 7000 users of their slide film. How many users of B&W slide film are there? Let's see. The number of Kodak slide film versus B&W slide film posts on APUG is roughly in ratio of 5 to 1. Therefore there are about 7000/5 = 1400 B&W slide film users. A recent article put Fuji's slide film at about 80 percent of the slide film market. Therefore there are (7000+1400)*4 = 33600 slide film users. This is consistent with the number of slide film related APUG posts.
Due to the troubles of Rochester, abysmal sales and so on, Kodak nearly went out of business, its corpse turned over to yet another charnel house.
All major surveys show that slide film has steadily declined in market share. Slide film is very sick and its long term survival prospects are very dim. If slide film is to survive at all it will be among film dilettante dabblers. Slide film continues to decay. Nothing short of a miracle could save it at this point in time. For all practical purposes, slide film is dead.
If this is deemed too inconvenient and too costly to shoot E6, maybe we set our expectation too high.
I live in Toronto and I would have thought that people in Toronto would be the last ones to complain about the inconvenience of shooting E6 film. There are still several labs in the city to process E6 film. Toronto Image Works still offers 4-hour same day turnaround for E-6 processing. Processing cost is only $6.20 per 120 roll if you prepay (who doesn't as you would have to pay in 4 hrs anyway). Slide film is available from B&H for 2-3 day delivery to Toronto with very reasonable shipping cost. Provia 100 is still selling for $3.79 for a 120 roll even when Japanese Yen vs US$ is at historical high. If this is deemed too inconvenient and too costly to shoot E6, maybe we set our expectation too high.
I guess it all comes down to whether one feels that he/she can produce the similar quality of work with other medium with less cost and hassel, whether it is negative film or digital. For myself, I will be willing to go through a lot more trouble to keep shooting E6, as, even after all these years of development in DSLR and negative film, I still don't feel that they catch up with slides in terms of color redition for landscape shooting, at least not to my personal liking.
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