No Lachlan, you're completely off. Pan Matrix film was basically regular Matrix film with added sensitizer dye to make it pan sensitive. Yes, some carbon was added to, but for another reason. This kind of product needs a much deeper gelatin layer than Super-XX, though Super-XX could be tanned and used for certain other alt techniques. Technicolor made their own DT products. So did Color Corp of America. So did the US military. So did Agfa. Super-XX had an extremely long straight line, so was preferred for color separation negatives. Matrix films were just the opposite and had a terribly long toe, and that's why dye transfer had such a bad time reproducing highlights unless separate highlight masking was done. You're also completely wrong, Mr. Laser; dye transfer printing was the gold standard of color portrait work for several decades and very common with high-end studios. Some of them custom blended their own dyes, just like Technicolor did to match specific movie sets. There were very large labs which did the printing on an assembly-line basis. I met with the former owner of the largest of those labs a couple years ago to try to pry out some secrets. Ctein was kind enough to show me his DT prints of the British Royal Family trust, which demanded DT. The main problem nowadays is that everyone wants everything yesterday; and inkjet is far easier. DT gave much better hue control in my opinion, and dyes have a transparency and life which inks don't. The difference in blacks is stunning. But I certainly don't expect a big commercial revival or either DT still or movies. Even hazmat issues related to industrial quantities of tanning agents limit that possibility. During that era chromogenic 'C' papers didn't have very good permanence. Cibachrome came along and stole some of the thunder from DT, being even more permanent but rather difficult to tame for subtle portrait use (I did a number of portraits with it). Then Kodak became just plain undependable of a supplier. Digital printing gradually kept getting better, and the rest is history. But DT might be around for awhile longer among niche users, and could in fact easily be revived if someone had a sufficient budget for coating matrix film for general distribution. Efke did that about 15 yrs ago.