You get one choice; b&w and irregular coating.Great idea. While you're at it, please coat me some boxes of 20X24 MGWT, Seagull G graded, Brilliant Bromide, and Polygrade V at half the price I paid for these. Then in your spare time, how about some color paper too? I need it in six weeks. That should be ample for your R&D phase. The following year please provide Kodachrome sheet film.
It is important to remember that a significant percentage of EK's coating machinery time is being used to make non-photographic products.
Wat else is being made then? Or is all other time used to coat motion picture film (negative+positive)?
Among other things, they make flexible circuit boards.
Plus all sorts of specialized products that employ their coating technologies.
See some of them here: https://www.kodak.com/en/advanced-materials/home/
But are these made in the same facility or on the same equipment?
Kodak only ever mention photography and cinematography when they talk about refurbishing or expanding their film manufacturing capabilities.
As I understand, they may be in the pasta business as well.
Yes - on the same coating lines.
It is their coating technology and expertise that constitutes their primary commercial advantage.
And the various uses for that technology and expertise - both photographic and non-photographic - actually compete for time on the equipment.
Their burgeoning business manufacturing ESTAR PET "Films" is an example of how they apply that technology and expertise - see here: https://www.kodak.com/en/advanced-materials/product/estar-pet-films/
And yes, that shares much of the equipment and staffing that are used to make the photographic films.
AND for clarity, when they refer to "film manufacturing capabilities", they include those mostly non-photographic products.
Acknowledging of course that one of the uses for those ESTAR PET based "Films" is to serve as the substrate for a number of photographic "Films".
"Our film sales have increased on motion picture and in still film and other films.
Emphasis added.
As almost all of the worldwide acetate base production comes from Germany, there may be some challenges in the future if they don't take steps to replace as much of that as possible with Estar, or to somehow find/support other sources.
A recent short article from Silvergrain Classics, timely to the discussion, without much new information but with a fun old Kodak picture.
Kodak's Next Chapter: Supporting the Future of Film
I have Very Little "connection" to the Motion Picture Business.even then it is only through people like Charles who have connections with that business that the information comes to our attention.
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