Fortethe Hungarian Photo company whose name has slipped my mind
Fortethe Hungarian Photo company whose name has slipped my mind
Film is still relatively cheap (except TMY)...
8x10 TMY-2 just went from $12/sheet to $15/sheet:
Since yesterday, B&H has altered the pricing. Now it has 400 sheets available for $12/sheet and 220 sheets at the higher $15/sheet. I assume based on expiration dates. Far from cheap, but possibly "one last buy" by those of us not wealthy.Beyond what I'm willing to pay. It's now a rich man's film...
Sometimes I wonder about "people".
People complain that the price of film is higher than it was "back in the day".
Someone points out that "back in the day", when adjusted for inflation, film is actually not much more costly now. Indeed if average wages are taken into account it's probably cheaper. So people still moan that Kodachrome was $4.80 in 1990 completely missing the point that the $4.80 in 1990 would be $10 today....without factoring in wage inflation.
Sure, I could buy Kocacolor for £1.99 in the early 80s. Say 1983.....in fact that is the price Argos were selling it at....so would have been higher at specialist camera shops. Today that is £6.88 which is *less* than Color Plus sells for. Looking at Ilford B&W prices they're not much different adjusted for inflation too.
Remember, you could buy a new car for £3000 then. And average weekly wages were a pittance compared to now.
What is not fair, is comparing today's prices to those of the turn of the 21st century when film stock was practically being dumped.
$19.99 at BH but, yeah, that's expensive.Ektachrome at $24 per roll - and I DON'T have a right to complain...??
What about us poor color shooters of Velvia 50 in 4x5 which runs almost double that? Or any color for that matter?It’s really a shame that the most advanced B&W film made seems to get further and further beyond the reach of many photographers.
It is a funny complaint from european point of view. Many would kill in the old continent to refill for only $60. I have a small compact car (Renault Megane) and cost me around $80 using regular gas, with Premium gas would be $90.Gasoline cost me almost $60 to fill up (Premium required) in a regular sedan. It's nuts!
Gas in my area is $3.19 in 1952 would have been $.33 a gallon, a little research and gas in L.A was selling for .27 a gallon.
We got a deal yesterday on gas - $1.50/litre CDN for premium at Costco in Abbotsford.
Regular gas was $1.40/litre yesterday at Costco Abbotsford (no transit levy).I saw it for $147/litre at Poco Costco on Thursday. If I go to Mobile, I get 7 cents off/litre in the form of points that I use in Superstore. The other shocking thing I saw at Mobile, diesel was a bit more expensive that gasoline! I don't ever recall seeing that before...
What we need are good old fashioned gas wars! Remember those? I remember the price dipping to around 30 cents/litre in Victoria, summer 1990.
Regular gas was $1.40/litre yesterday at Costco Abbotsford (no transit levy).
Diesel is actually a byproduct of the production of non-diesel gas. The relative prices are a function of how the two markets are functioning. When demand for diesel is higher than gas, the spot market price for diesel is higher.
I expect that the switch is at least partially due to the growing number of electric and hybrid vehicles.
And by the way, I think it probably is Mobil, not Mobile![]()
Americans tend to drive longer distances. So it works out about the same. In any case last year I was filling up for around $35 - $40 I think. So it's relative.It is a funny complaint from european point of view. Many would kill in the old continent to refill for only $60. I have a small compact car (Renault Megane) and cost me around $80 using regular gas, with Premium gas would be $90.
When I was stationed in Japan in 1965 in the USAF, I used to buy US Navy gasoline on base for $0.11 a gallon. Cigarettes were $1.05 - a carton. Rum $1.65 a fifth and hookers were 1000 Yen, not that I bought them, of course.Gas in my area is $3.19 in 1952 would have been $.33 a gallon, a little research and gas in L.A was selling for .27 a gallon.
Americans tend to drive longer distances.
That is 1981 or so. There were a lot of people using a lot of film then. What was happening though is that many of them were moving or had moved from slides and movies to print films - the one hour minilabs were everywhere. And a fair few of them were taking a fair number of photos.Back to film. 40 years ago, film was all that was used but average people took hardly any photos. Most people had a pretty bad camera and took bad pictures two or three times a year.
a fair few of them were taking a fair number of photos
... if you have any recollection of the regular average citizen of 1981, how many of them were taking a picture every few minutes? -- or every few days, for that matter?
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