A brief (yes, maybe!) ad to my earlier post (#17).
This week I have added a new MF camera to my collection - a Rolleiflex 3.5E2 TLR which I bought on the spot after it was offered to me at an excellent (= low) price by a Melbourne soon to be 'ex' film shooter who said he decided to dispose of his film gear and go the way of the dreaded 'D".
Oh, well. His loss, my gain. I ow have four Rolleis. And I intend to use them all. More film to be bought. From Asia this time.
All this to say, I agree with many posters in this thread, who have noted that there appears to be a seemingly endless supply of used workable MF gear on the market. Like Ralph Lambrecht (#25), I too intend to use my Rolleis as long as I can still carry and hold them (at almost 70 I am planning - and hoping - to still have a few good years left for my photography, touch wood) and also keep my darkroom going, to reduce my processing costs.
A more interesting project for me will be to sort out, quality check and archive my huge collection of negatives and slides dating to the early 1960s. A few of my collections will be donated to public organisations (municipal councils, local and provincial/state museums, university libraries etc) for historical purposes, if they are willing to accept them. Some do, others don't. I figure I have about five years of fairly consistent film scanning ahead of me,which should do wonders to keep dementia at bay - that or push me into age-related insanity, whichever comes first!
As a last note, on my photo shoots both here (Australia) and in Southeast Asia, I am now seeing more photographers with film cameras than I have in the past ten years, which is a positive and encouraging sign.
As for film, while 120 may well become a niche product, I reckon someone will manufacture it as long as there are buyers for it. Lucky is apparently producing film again, which is a good sign, if they can bring their quality control standards up to par.
Better we concentrate less on gloom-and-doom scenarios and just enjoy our cameras in the time they (and we) have left.