Film Ferrania - Developments from October 2023 onward

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brbo

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Why do you find it so hard to believe? Only because you never saw a box that said "Ferrania "?

The Kodak - Fuji monopoly/duopoly case was widely debated throughout late 80s and 90s (just one example). Never ever did Ferrania (nor Ferrania/3M) enter the debate. You can guess why.

You are, of course, encouraged to come up with any half credible link to support that Ferrania was at anytime anywhere near to being largest C-41 manufacturer in the world. Sorry, but that claim has all the "Pentax 17 camera accounting for 20% of entire Ricoh's revenue" vibe. "Ferrania being world's largest C-41 manufacturer" statement probably started as something like "Ferrania was largest white-label colour film manufacturer in Europe" and then morphed into this. Frankly, it's quite absurd that this is taken seriously on Photrio.
 

cmacd123

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One needs to remember that 3M was a serious company, for example in magnetic tape production they were the absolute best in manufacturing quality. When they bought Ferrania they probably would have ensured to create a quality product, even if it was for a low cost tier.
And According to one dealer in used reel to reel tape, 3M did make Scotch" audio tape at Ferrania for the European market, and in a joint venture with sumoto for the Japan Market.

 

cmacd123

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I don't think we should underestimate just how much film Ferrania was cranking out in those days. They were supplying a lot of those huge labs across Europe and certainly for a time they were supplying Wal-Mart in the USA too. Goodness knows who else....I mean, do we know who made Kirkland film for Costco?

Kmart and Sears (before they combined) also both sold 3M colour film in North america. 3M also was a big conumer mass market photofinisher, and they would print your memories on un-named ferrania paper.

3M also sold microfilm, and dry silver print paper for microfilm. the dry silver paper I used was marked USA, but the film was likly sourced at 3M italy.
 

aw614

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I do believe "target" branded film was also 3m/ferrania. I shot a few expired rolls at the beginning of the pandemic that I picked up on offerup
 

flavio81

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The Kodak - Fuji monopoly/duopoly case was widely debated throughout late 80s and 90s (just one example). Never ever did Ferrania (nor Ferrania/3M) enter the debate. You can guess why.
What kind of argument is that?

You present a paper that compares Kodak versus Fuji. Does this mean those were the only two manufacturers of color film? No.

"Ferrania being world's largest C-41 manufacturer" statement probably started as something like "Ferrania was largest white-label colour film manufacturer in Europe"

I guess Wal-mart is located in Europe, then? /s

It seems you never saw off-label film, then. There was a ton of off-label film, everywhere.
 

Agulliver

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The Kodak - Fuji monopoly/duopoly case was widely debated throughout late 80s and 90s (just one example). Never ever did Ferrania (nor Ferrania/3M) enter the debate. You can guess why.

You are, of course, encouraged to come up with any half credible link to support that Ferrania was at anytime anywhere near to being largest C-41 manufacturer in the world. Sorry, but that claim has all the "Pentax 17 camera accounting for 20% of entire Ricoh's revenue" vibe. "Ferrania being world's largest C-41 manufacturer" statement probably started as something like "Ferrania was largest white-label colour film manufacturer in Europe" and then morphed into this. Frankly, it's quite absurd that this is taken seriously on Photrio.


Whatever, dude.
 

brbo

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What kind of argument is that?

You present a paper that compares Kodak versus Fuji. Does this mean those were the only two manufacturers of color film? No.

I never said that there were only two manufacturers of colour film. I just said that Ferrania/3M was nowhere near the market share of Kodak or later Kodak/Fuji duopoly.

I'm all for a bit of "lateral thinking" that is so popular in our timeline, but lets try to keep it real here. When 3M (and everybody else for that matter) says (scroll to page 211) that they never made a dent into Kodak/Fuji dominated market it really is time to put that claim to bed. Ferrania was tiny in comparison to Kodak when 3M acquired it (for $55m when Kodak's yearly revenue in that time was north of $1B) and couldn't grow it to compete with Kodak and later Fuji. That doesn't mean they haven't produced a ton of film, it's just that others put out way more.

I guess Wal-mart is located in Europe, then? /s

It seems you never saw off-label film, then. There was a ton of off-label film, everywhere.
Whatever, dude.

Maybe you could tone down your ad hominem responses and provide some serious arguments instead? I'm guilty of a couple of responses made in jest not realising that people were serious when floating this idea, but can we pick up the level here? Can you provide any reference to any kind of data that would suggest that Ferrania was anywhere close to being largest manufacturer of colour film?
 

foc

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Brand-of-film-under-3M-Film-Ferrania__020.jpg


This image was assembled by the FILM Ferrania team in an attempt to display the hundreds upon hundreds of brands of film produced during the 3M era.

https://thedarkroom.com/film-brand/...LnBaDpP-kO0zArRRESjvNTYUlLxHjdoeJSQ1S-KZGZaw7
 

ChrisGalway

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The history is fascinating but the big question is: does Ferrania have any capability to make a colour film ... negative and/or positive ... today or in the near future? I mean not only the know-how, but also the people and machinery.

That they made a bundle of film in the past is not in dispute!
 

Agulliver

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Maybe you could tone down your ad hominem responses and provide some serious arguments instead? I'm guilty of a couple of responses made in jest not realising that people were serious when floating this idea, but can we pick up the level here? Can you provide any reference to any kind of data that would suggest that Ferrania was anywhere close to being largest manufacturer of colour film?

Pot, kettle, black. I do not feel your posts are being made in good faith, but I have sufficient restraint not to "call the moderator".

There's plenty of information about Ferrania's history provided by myself and other posters.
 

Agulliver

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The history is fascinating but the big question is: does Ferrania have any capability to make a colour film ... negative and/or positive ... today or in the near future? I mean not only the know-how, but also the people and machinery.

That they made a bundle of film in the past is not in dispute!

Well, at least one poster doesn't seem to believe it.

I think the point of bringing up their past is that unlike Harman, Ferrania has manufactured colour film...indeed in the not so distant past. There may be some expertise still available to call upon in addition to a coating machine capable of achieving colour coating and lots of data in the form of physical and electronic paperwork regarding their past product.s This *may* make it feasible for them to resume production of colour film faster than Harman can perfect Phoenix.
 

albireo

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Pot, kettle, black. I do not feel your posts are being made in good faith, but I have sufficient restraint not to "call the moderator".

There's plenty of information about Ferrania's history provided by myself and other posters.


But - surely - Kodak big? Kodak beautiful? Kodak great? All hail Kodak!

Big, big, largest Kodak!

Step aside, Foreigna!
 

brbo

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Well, at least one poster doesn't seem to believe it.

This one poster donated to Ferrania Kickstarter (yes, DONATED - never claimed any P30 or used discount from Ferrania when I could and paid for all my P30 rolls in full when it was available at their store). And good luck finding any posts from me bashing Ferrania or questioning the way they went about setting their new operation. You'll be as successful as finding evidence Ferrania was worlds largest manufacturer of C-41.

So, you see, it is possible to support Ferrania without making embarrassingly inaccurate statements.
 

flavio81

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I never said that there were only two manufacturers of colour film. I just said that Ferrania/3M was nowhere near the market share of Kodak or later Kodak/Fuji duopoly.

I'm all for a bit of "lateral thinking" that is so popular in our timeline, but lets try to keep it real here. When 3M (and everybody else for that matter) says (scroll to page 211) that they never made a dent into Kodak/Fuji dominated market it really is time to put that claim to bed.

You need perhaps to reconsider the way you read things out there in texts or the internet.

What the page says is :

"Ultimately, 3M’s photographic business became
the largest supplier of private label film to customers
around the world, but the consumer business stayed
with Kodak and the newest up-and-comer, Fuji. "

Maybe you should take in mind that "market share" is specific to a market. What this means is that when they tried to sell their film under their own label, they couldn't get the market share of Kodak or Fuji, nothing more, nothing less.

Private label is a different market, and they did dominate that market. That is a huge market too.

Ferrania was tiny in comparison to Kodak when 3M acquired it (for $55m when Kodak's yearly revenue in that time was north of $1B)

Ferrania enlarged their operations after the 3M purchase, not before.
 

flavio81

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Maybe you could tone down your ad hominem responses and provide some serious arguments instead?

I think myself and other people also demand more serious argumenting from your side.

Pot, kettle, black. I do not feel your posts are being made in good faith, but I have sufficient restraint not to "call the moderator".

There's plenty of information about Ferrania's history provided by myself and other posters.

Yes, when FILM Ferrania (the attempted resurrection) started, there were some figures about the scale of the former Ferrania operation, and it was a very big scale.
 
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