The new cameras cannot compete against the used cameras.
Bessa R2,R3,R4 rangefinders for about $800. Used Leica film cameras are close to the same price.
Fuji/Bessa 667 folding cameras were $2299. No more. Couldn't compete with used medium format cameras.
Leica...well, Leica is different.
And maybe, just maybe, the tough market that has been affecting the digital camera sales is also causing problems for new film cameras?
In many Third World and developing countries, film is still the dominant medium for photography. It would be interesting to find out what cameras they are using. Surely they can't all be buying second-hand cameras! I suspect China is manufacturing film cameras specifically for sale in those regions.
The Fuji GF670 was a one off, 10,000 batch of cameras made. It was never meant to be a long term product. It took several years to sell out the run and now it's mostly gone. It goes in and out of stock at B & H depending if they can get their hands on them.
That nearly 10,000 were sold shows that it did compete quite well.
I dont think this is true at all. In rural China (very poor) or India, I see cell phones taking pictures. For people who are too poor to have even a cell phone, they simply dont produce images. It takes extreme poverty to not be able to afford a cell phone (phones start at less than $20 in China). Even your typical peasant who scrounges the streets for recycled garbage for a living has a mobile phone!
Neither China nor India are Third World countries. I was talking about countries where the typical household does not have access to a computer, and cell phone service is very limited.
I believe if you wish to continue with manual cameras over the next decade or two you'll need to become proficient with DIY maintenance/repair. It's not that hard in many cases but sourcing and making parts will be the hard part.
This thread has turned into another one of those - 'because there are many film cameras out there, there will always be film cameras' discussions. What few people talk about is the cost of film and repairs. I sold my Mamiya RB67 Pro S because of several reasons, but mainly I saw what film was costing. When I started out with it just two or three years before selling it, color film cost just under $5.00. Every time I went to get more film, the price went up 50 cents. At the end I was paying $8.00 a roll and color film was getting hard to find. When you add $10 for developing the film, it didn't take long to realize that I would be spending the price of a digital in just film. Cameras that are sitting on the shelf with their lubes turning to varnish will cost $75+ to get cleaned. Who is going to pay that for a camera that will only be worth $25? The other day I was in to my local thrift shop and they had a Pentax K1000 with a telephoto lense for $5.00. I passed it up. I did pick it up and try it out and it seemed to work. I suspect there will be a market for LF cameras because they do have some advantages that smaller formats don't. And those that use LF want a better picture than either digital or even medium format will give. We also don't know what new things will come about in the digital world that will blow away film. However, for now cost is the main factor and digital is beating that all to heck.
This thread has turned into another one of those - 'because there are many film cameras out there, there will always be film cameras' discussions. What few people talk about is the cost of film and repairs. I sold my Mamiya RB67 Pro S because of several reasons, but mainly I saw what film was costing. When I started out with it just two or three years before selling it, color film cost just under $5.00. Every time I went to get more film, the price went up 50 cents. At the end I was paying $8.00 a roll and color film was getting hard to find. When you add $10 for developing the film, it didn't take long to realize that I would be spending the price of a digital in just film. Cameras that are sitting on the shelf with their lubes turning to varnish will cost $75+ to get cleaned. Who is going to pay that for a camera that will only be worth $25? The other day I was in to my local thrift shop and they had a Pentax K1000 with a telephoto lense for $5.00. I passed it up. I did pick it up and try it out and it seemed to work. I suspect there will be a market for LF cameras because they do have some advantages that smaller formats don't. And those that use LF want a better picture than either digital or even medium format will give. We also don't know what new things will come about in the digital world that will blow away film. However, for now cost is the main factor and digital is beating that all to heck.
Plus you'll have to to that every 3-5 years, a never-ending cycle.Additional hidden costs to going digital is that I would have to replace a perfectly good computer with a faster one with much more memory, buy a RAID system to back up the files, spend money for Fauxto$hop software and most importantly lose the archival advantages of film and the quality of a negative versus a file.
My statement about the cost of digital vs. film is based on the average Joe that takes pics of the kids and does the Grand Canyon thing. For the person that includes developing and all that in his hobby or profession, then there will be nothing much to gain by going digital as far as loving your work. This Christmas I will be taking my Minolta X-700 and some of my lenses to take pictures of the family. If it gets dropped by the 2 years in the family when I set it down, it is not much of a loss and will probably work anyway. I don't want to chance that with my Nikon D5100 digital. My use of film is going to be limited now that I'm retired and not even working part time. I am concerned about preserving digital pictures. One time I wanted to ad some pictures to a CD and renamed the CD thinking I was making another Folder. That resulted in the pictures that I had on the CD being non readable. I still had them on the hard drive, but I learned that just labeling a CD wrong can wipe out a whole stash of pictures. I have never lost 100 slides by mislabeling one of my slide boxes. Ric.
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