Today, surprise, ilford films jumped. Only HP5 is sensibly priced at 79$. The rest are 100$.
Even Tmax100 jumped a few days ago, from 89 to 109$.
Kodak Color film prices are out of any common sense now. Just a ripoff.
Kodak better hope that this policy which looks to be deliberate but with little good economic reasons does not come back to bite it in the face of other manufacturers being able to do it more cheaply vis a vis their cassette films. It may be that you know enough of such costs to demonstrate in specific terms that Kodak has a business case for charging what it does for bulk rolls. If please share it as so far I have not seen such a case.Kodak always priced bulk film to make it barely practical. Bulk film required special handling that deviated from their mass production and they did not want to deal with it. So they priced it accordingly. The message had always been, bulk film will be made available, but we want you to have a really go reason not to used our packaged film.
Kodak better hope that this policy which looks to be deliberate but with little good economic reasons does not come back to bite it in the face of other manufacturers being able to do it more cheaply vis a vis their cassette films. It may be that you know enough of such costs to demonstrate in specific terms that Kodak has a business case for charging what it does for bulk rolls. If please share it as so far I have not seen such a case.
It seems to me that giving a reason like "special handling that deviated from their mass production in not something they want to deal" may have an economic basis but just saying it does not constitute that basis
Thanks
pentaxuser
Thanks I will take that as Kodak's economic case as far as you are concerned.The number of people who bulk load film is such a small percentage that is does not even show up at the financial noise level.
Thanks I will take that as Kodak's economic case as far as you are concerned.
pentaxuser
What is a "bulk" of film that costs $49? Last time I bought film, it certainly wasn't $49/roll.
It is a 100 foot roll. You can load your own 36 exposure cassettes. One bulk roll gives you about 19 rolls of film.
Ah, thanks. I have been thinking about experimenting with this so I don't have to expose a full 36-frame roll before seeing my results.
Not only that, you can also roll 35 exposures and always fill your printfiles without leftovers that are suuuuper annoying. In the end, that makes one free extra roll of film (on a psychological level).
How will it come back to bite them? Kodak has done this for decades. I remember using bulk rolls in the 1970s for laboratory microscopes. Users of cameras with bulk film backs had to buy these long rolls, but that market mostly disappeared with the use of digital cameras.Kodak better hope that this policy which looks to be deliberate but with little good economic reasons does not come back to bite it in the face
I have noticed those prices too and switched to Hp5 100ft about 3 or 4 years ago. HP5 120 is priced better than Kodak so I use that too. Also, the 8x10 HP5 is one of the most reasonably priced 'quality' B&W films. I even have a 100ft of HP5 16mm single perf, so at this time I have Hp5 in every camera.I’m talking about bulk.
About 5 years ago, panf was 44$, fp4 48$, hp5 49$
Then, a year later they went 49$, 55$, 55$
Then 59, 60, 62. Then, 69, then 79...
Today, surprise, ilford films jumped. Only HP5 is sensibly priced at 79$. The rest are 100$.
Even Tmax100 jumped a few days ago, from 89 to 109$.
I’m glad to have hoarded a lot of rolls... but I’m tempted to add more HP5 before it jumps to 100-110$
Or use the PrintFile pages that have six rows that hold six negatives each. That is what I do.
Printfile 35-6HB Archival Negative Preservers 35mm - 6 Strips of 6 Negatives - 100 Pack
https://www.freestylephoto.biz/3561...chival-Negative-Preservers-35mm-6-Strips-of-6
Fine but doesn't this make my case that there is no good business for Kodak to do what they do if Ilford does not charge this premium for bulk rolls vis a vis its cassettes. You haven't mentioned Foma but if its percentage is much the same it manages not to charge this premium for bulk rolls either.The percentage is probably about the same for Ilford.
Fine so there is no problem for Kodak then. As long as its only a few U.S. and non U.S. customers that declare themselves on Photrio to have left the Kodak fold then yes that doesn't amount to a hill of beans as Rick said to Louis in N Africa in 1942How will it come back to bite them? Kodak has done this for decades. I remember using bulk rolls in the 1970s for laboratory microscopes. Users of cameras with bulk film backs had to buy these long rolls, but that market mostly disappeared with the use of digital cameras.
What nail in Kodak's coffin? Where do you manufacture this stuff? Is Kodak, just as with Fujifilm in that previous thread about Acros, specifically targeting their prices to ruin your budget? They want to ruin your photograph experience? Take photographs of your world, enjoy life instead of speculating based on no data.another nail in Kodak still films coffin
I’m always at 37-38 exposures, probably because of my Leicas. My F6 and its automatic advance to frame 1 wastes too many first exposures..
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