I was not referring to buying Acros film, but the Fuji film plants, as suggested by member bvy
So many people right now are buying Acros 100 that the cost is $60 per pro pack (normal price is $23), *IF* you can find it. All available channels in the US are sold out.
The prices (at Yodobashi) are still normal here (2500 yen a pro-pack for 120), but they are still limiting online sales to 5 packs per person. I just registered under my work address so I could order some more, since I've exceeded my limit as a regular customer.
You are lucky. I hope you can stock up as much as you want. I'd be buying right now if I could at regular prices. I've never seen a film go extinct as fast as Acros has. Perhaps more supply will hit the channels soon but the early indications are not good. B & H has reported that they are done selling this film. If they can't get any, why would anyone else be able to?
As a reseller, I buy my film from official Fuji distributors. While there is no restriction on quantity (as of now), shipments are being delayed by 7~10 days. I expect stocks won't last too long.
Kumar
Of 35 or 120?
5 boxes are waiting for me at mother-in-law's house. I've texted my wife and asked her to pop into Bic Camera in Fukuoka to see if they have any on hand and scoop them up for me.
Andrew, you may have better luck ordering it online and having it sent to her house. Here in Kyoto they've pulled the Acros boxes off the shelves since there is no stock left in the stores.
reminds me of my local store in my hometown 16 yeras ago...
tmy cost about 65clams shipped from nyc ( pick your shoppe didn't matter )
local store ... 2 years expired, covered with dust ... 100$/box LOL
I've NEVER seen a film supply dry up quicker than Acros has. This is unprecedented. I've been through many different situations where films have been discontinued and none have dried up anywhere near as fast as this. Ektachrome's discontinuation was the exact opposite. In Shanghai, there was stock of Ektachrome YEARS after it was out of production. No one would buy the stuff so it sat on shelves for seemingly an eternity.
Meanwhile, Acros goes out of stock in an entire week.
Nice job Fujifilm.
True, but you do see the occasional roll for sale. The sellers usually want only a little less than the owners of Tim Rudman's Toning Book. The future fate for Acros or should that be fete? A fete being a place of joy for sellers and ironically buyers who are grateful that for a king's ransom they have been able to secure a roll.HIE disappeared very, very quickly too.
By the way, does anyone know when Acros was first introduced?
I've tried googling this, found something around 2001 and 2002, but I suspect it was released even earlier than that?
The "New Product News" section in the November 2000 issue of Nippon Camera includes an item on Acros which specifies the initial availability dates as November 2000 for 120 and sheet film, December 2000 for 35mm.
True, but you do see the occasional roll for sale.
Wow...thanks for digging that up ^^
And like HIE, you will see Acros for sale via eBay for years to come. I suspect part of the speed in which this film vanished ( has it really yet?) is that the eBay speculators ponied up capitol to scoop it up as fast as possible.
Yes, it has gone fast but in some ways, it is business as usual.
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