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Film is back! so says GQ magazine

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Wow, if they squeezed one more flashing ad in there, I would have got a headache. I guess it can't hurt, but it all seemed a little bling.
 
There goes the neighborhood.

All of 'us' love seeing articles about film and it's resurgence. It sort of validates (finally) what we do and maybe even why we do it.
I can't help but see articles like this and immediately think, "There go the prices again". It's like giving eBay a 20% boost in prices.

Wait....I just remembered I have a closet full of analog that I'll never use....stuff I experimented with to get to where I am today and settle on what I use today.
Woo-Hoo! Ebay here I come. Time to think about thinning out the camera-herd
 
XP2 Super is "faster to develop"? Lol!

Well despite the fact that this whole article or whatever you call it is really short and a little bit sarcastic, I still don't get how it's faster to develop a list or simply talking about the fact that it's really a C-41 film so labs can process it in 3 minutes? Or maybe they mean because other black-and-white films might not be able to be processed it normal labs and have to be sent out taking days or weeks instead 1 hour?

Interesting.
 
Gentleman prefer film :wink:
 
"...you're shooting moments you want to remember, not whatever might rack up a few likes."

:smile:

Ken
 
"Film is back" Well, my photo dealer is telling me the opposite. And he has his sales figures...


But is always great to see film mentioned in a publication outside our Apug-world.
 
My lab just re-introduced process-paid E6 for Agfphoto CT Precisa 100! :smile:
 
I like the part where you should put your 100 $ AE1 into a 2300 $ Prada bag.
Or maybe you use the Prada bag for your 2000 $ Leica and just carry the AE1 on your shoulder oh so nonchalantly.
It is good to know our interest in film is now validated by GQ though.
 
What's the old saying about clutching at straws.
 
i just got back from one of the last stores in my area
had chems, paper even 4-5 and IP instant ..
it wasnt 1880 all over again, but at least
non dig wasnt all a special order ...
 
My local professional dealer that I visited this Wednesday only has about sixty rolls of total of 135 and 120 films of colour neg. and colour slide film in stock and no monochrome film at all, when I asked the owner if that was all he had in stock he said "the majority of our customers are professionals, and don't use film".
 
What's the old saying about clutching at straws.

But who's really clutching here? Film, with its nostalgic 'resurgence'? Or GQ, trying still to sell $400 ties to 'elites' who get their fashion sense from a magazine, having never had a personal tailor?

s-a
 
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My local professional dealer that I visited this Wednesday only has about sixty rolls of total of 135 and 120 films of colour neg. and colour slide film in stock and no monochrome film at all, when I asked the owner if that was all he had in stock he said "the majority of our customers are professionals, and don't use film".

When I recently visited one of the major professional dealers in our area it was a slow day so the manager chatted me up after my purchase of a manual extension ring set.

When I asked about their newly enlarged darkroom products section he told me they had sold more film in the last year than any of the previous five or so. And there had been an uptick in purchasing by the educational markets. He didn't elaborate regarding specific educational markets.

He also told me that when they recently relocated to a new, larger building the owners had, of course, considered leaving their in-house film processing services behind. But after looking into their crystal ball a bit they kept it, and are now thrilled they did so, due to the rise in film processing business.

When I asked about customer and processing demographics he said that a significant slice of that film processing business increase was C-41 for working professionals. Which professionals? He couldn't say for sure, but guessed it was probably the portrait and wedding photographers.

He then pointed out one of his part-time staff members who did weddings exclusively on film. "She's booked up for the next year..."

Things happen. Then things change and happen again in different ways. That's how the world works. The film-is-totally-dead crowd may unwittingly be living in a past that never completely materialized.

Ken
 
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The film-is-totally-dead crowd may unwittingly be living in a past that never completely materialized.

Ken

I make no attempt to speak for Ken. Nevertheless, his conclusion is a marvelously pregnant observation that applies more broadly to a certain self-anointed “progressive” crowd that propagates many wrong-headed ideas about art and what actually is contemporary.
 
twit

Personally, whenever some twit-inspired publication declares something to be "cool" or "in," I run as fast as I can in the opposite direction.
 
"Film is back" Well, my photo dealer is telling me the opposite. And he has his sales figures...


But is always great to see film mentioned in a publication outside our Apug-world.

European countries are swirling the drain, economically speaking, so are perhaps the exception. Film sales are strongly increasing here in China and my film developer is constantly pushing back the times I can get my negatives and slides returned. 4 days used to be the norm....now 7-8 days are.
 
I make no attempt to speak for Ken. Nevertheless, his conclusion is a marvelously pregnant observation that applies more broadly to a certain self-anointed “progressive” crowd that propagates many wrong-headed ideas about art and what actually is contemporary.

its not dead??

i see your observations to be wrong.
chemical photography is a shadow of its former self.
hundreds of thousands of businesses related to the photography industry have closed and the current situation is barely stable ...
thats not dead?
 
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"The Teacher
Canon AE-1 Program

It's perfect for a rookie: cheap (about $100 for a body and a lens), brawny, and fully manual. You'll quickly learn how to work it, because you won't have a choice."

Oops. Isn't/wasn't the point of this camera the fact that it ISN'T fully manual! Haha! Nonetheless, great to see any kind of new attention to analog
 
i just got back from one of the last stores in my area
had chems, paper even 4-5 and IP instant ..
it wasnt 1880 all over again, but at least
non dig wasnt all a special order ...

I was probably just recently in the same place! Too bad we didn't run into each other! I guess for all we know, we could have!
 
I was probably just recently in the same place! Too bad we didn't run into each other! I guess for all we know, we could have!

send me an PM next time you are going ! :smile:

i hadn't been in maybe 7months to a year ...
when they were in the jewelry district
and before that when they were sbi
i was there much more often
and i could stop by jerry's /asw
to get some other stuff ...
now they have a lot of shopping, but
i don't have any need for anything else in the plaza
whole paycheck, staples, liquor store, mcD's ?

but i used to live near there so it is like warm-and-fuzzy still ... :smile:
 
When I asked about their newly enlarged darkroom products section he told me they had sold more film in the last year than any of the previous five or so. And there had been an uptick in purchasing by the educational markets. He didn't elaborate regarding specific educational markets.

I know general business figures. But also what goes on around me. Both not necessarily need to match.

Or in other words: the film market is very heterogenic regionally.
 
When I asked about their newly enlarged darkroom products section he told me they had sold more film in the last year than any of the previous five or so. And there had been an uptick in purchasing by the educational markets. He didn't elaborate regarding specific educational markets.
a resurgence / uptick from near-death is near-near death, not alive and well
 
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