How do you figure?
It's a tool for me and a good one as some of the best light I like to work in falls off quickly in weather and shorter seasons. You had mentioned it was not a film with personality and from a purely technical standpoint, I would agree with that but a great photographer can take this film and pair it with great light, great subject matter and end up with a stellar photograph.
Conversely, I like Pan-F for the opposite reasons, when I want super long exposures and want to take advantage of it's dismal reciprocity characteristics. Again, a tool for me, not a sole decider.
For crying out loud, DONT BUY ANYMORE ACROS. BUY FROM ILFORD OR ONE OF THE OTHERS. Fuji did this with pack film, created hysteria and cleaned out their warehouses in a few weeks. Now all the panicked buyers are sitting on aging pack film. I know it's disappointing to me, I have quite a few rolls of Acros, it's lovely film. But so is TMX, FP4 ,Delta 100, Foma films and don't forget Ferrania. These guys really want our business, don't push away the companies that are committed to film AND paper
Best Regards Mike
My post was mainly intended as mild provocation to see if anyone could offer up anything about the film that's aesthetically distinctive...
All films are part of the tool kit, but some are rather easier to get distinctive, expressive results from. A lot is down to the skill of the printer & I think people would be amazed at how well some awful negatives can be printed. If the the light & everything else is under control, then making stunning prints becomes massively easier, but the film will still have an influence. I just happen to find most other films than Acros rather more inspiring to print from - don't get me wrong, I've made some of my favourite images on Acros, but I sometimes wonder if I'd like them even more if I'd made them on Delta 100 instead...
For crying out loud, DONT BUY ANYMORE ACROS. BUY FROM ILFORD OR ONE OF THE OTHERS. Fuji did this with pack film, created hysteria and cleaned out their warehouses in a few weeks. Now all the panicked buyers are sitting on aging pack film. I know it's disappointing to me, I have quite a few rolls of Acros, it's lovely film. But so is TMX, FP4 ,Delta 100, Foma films and don't forget Ferrania. These guys really want our business, don't push away the companies that are committed to film AND paper
Best Regards Mike
For crying out loud, DONT BUY ANYMORE ACROS. BUY FROM ILFORD OR ONE OF THE OTHERS. Fuji did this with pack film, created hysteria and cleaned out their warehouses in a few weeks. Now all the panicked buyers are sitting on aging pack film. I know it's disappointing to me, I have quite a few rolls of Acros, it's lovely film. But so is TMX, FP4 ,Delta 100, Foma films and don't forget Ferrania. These guys really want our business, don't push away the companies that are committed to film AND paper
Best Regards Mike
You are correct. I just get worked up with all the changes. People vote with their wallet. We have voted in Amazon, Walmart, Zappos, B&H, etc. All our local shops are closing . I'm as guilty as anyone. I sure do miss the 20th century.What makes you think that people are not using other films? I also use Tmax 100, 400 and Pan-F. I stocked up on Acros because it serves a specific need for me and I can still get it before the speculators hoard it.
Acros is the only Fuji film I used, the rest has been Ilford and Kodak.
We have voted in Amazon, Walmart, Zappos, B&H, etc. All our local shops are closing .
I haven't voted that way! I buy all my film at the local camera store, and have never bought anything at B&H. People here have tried to convince me that I should be buying from B&H instead of my local store, even when the local store is cheaper. Most odd.
In 2018 what's odd is that you have a local store that can beat B&H prices. It's great that you can support them. I wish I had one too, but online retailers for me are cheaper and with much better selection, and ship for free to my door. It's hard for the locals to compete for sure, and I feel for them.
Yesterday Amazon.com had over 10 boxes of Acros 120 size for sale at $29.99/box. Today they have ONE box 120 size for sale at $57.99.
Let the price gouging begin!!
If Fujifilm were an honest, forthright company, they would have notified their customers before supplies dried up....
Earlier posts in this thread have made mention that the notice announcing discontinuation of Acros also announced discontinuation of the Fuji black and white photographic paper.A Forbes.com article just came across my feed saying that along with Acros, Fuji was discontinuing the production of photo paper as well. Couldn't suss out from the blurb if that was the B&W paper they make for the Japan market or if it included Crystal Archive color paper as well.
A Forbes.com article just came across my feed saying that along with Acros, Fuji was discontinuing the production of photo paper as well. Couldn't suss out from the blurb if that was the B&W paper they make for the Japan market or if it included Crystal Archive color paper as well.
I agree that's a pretty cold way to discontinue a product - basically disappearing three days after the announcement. I'm sure there are some very surprised photographers that don't participate in forums and haven't seen the announcement yet, wondering what the hell happened when they try to restock their film at the regular places.
The discontinuation of an unprofitable product. Not sure how that rises to backstabbing.I'm seeing a LOT of hate towards Fujifilm in other forums because of the way they backstabbed their customers. Richly deserved IMO after what they pulled.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?