Pretty sure what's now Launceston Camera House was a Stallards as well up until one point. Seems unlikely they'd have two K14 processing lines in a state of <500,000, especially when bussing negs between Launceston and Hobart was cheap and easy (oh Redline Buses, how we miss you).
My press photographer grandfather only ever seemed to play with black and white, which he of course developed and printed himself. Colour didn't come to our newspapers until after he retired and the digital revolution was well underway. I highly doubt he shot much if any Kodachrome, maybe a few slides for his orchids. Much of his photography is of course with
The Mercury (who have since turned it over to the State Archives)... unfortunately much of his own work has become damaged/rotted due to lack of care in storage. (Photography was a job for him, not a passion.)
Tid-bit: Kodachrome was often subbed-in as a substitute for the problems associated with getting chromes of Velvia containing a lot of red (and variations of that channel) correct when printing to Ilfochrome Classic ('Ciba'); we often recommended Kodachrome where red fidelity
was a requirement. Velvia's strength is not really in the reds or blues, but in the vast library of green.
Interesting. I've only just been learning about Cibachrome/Ilfochrome after being given some developing kit and tools in a big lot of darkroom gear. Apparently it was an amazing archival format, albeit with limited dynamic range. The gentleman was clearly big into both Cibachrome and the Agfa equivalent, based on all the empty bottles I found in his darkroom. Really rather bummed direct positive-to-positive paper and processes have disappeared completely, though I guess we should be grateful to still have RA-4 in any capacity...
Not sure if you were able to see the Olegas Truchanas
This Vanishing World exhibit at QVMAG last year/earlier this year (highly recommend getting the associated book, images originally published in
The World Of... have far better reproduction, as you'd expect). Many of the colour prints exhibited were Cibachromes, from either Kodachrome or Agfachrome slides.
Image: Olegas Truchanas, Range upon range of mountains, south west Tasmania, c.1968. QVMAG Collection.Today marks the 100th anniversary of the birth of photographer, conservationist and adventurer Olegas Truchanas.Truchanas was born in Lithuania, and became a displaced person...
www.qvmag.tas.gov.au
We also have the best coffee... coincidence?
Eh, these days Hobart and Launceston would give Melbourne a run for its money regarding coffee. We take it no less seriously here ;-)
Surprising number of people getting around with film cameras too.