RH Designs said:The Silverprint ad suggests that the APX films were made for Agfa Photo and not by Agfa Photo. It also suggests that the company that made them still trades, and that they may be reintroduced under a different brand name. Silverprint would not publish such information without foundation so I think we have to keep an open (and optimistic!) mind for the moment.
Regards
Richard
Agfa's statement on Aerial film is here - Dead Link RemovedNick Zentena said:There was a story awhile back when the bankruptcy stuff was going on.
Agfa [the old company] still sold Agfa film for aerial and other uses. But they were just selling old stock basically. The film was made by Agfa the now bankrupt company. But supposedly Agfa [the still going part] had gotten enough to last for years of normal sales.
Confusing enough? Agfa [the old company] I think also was selling Agfa paper.
Curt said:Ilford; interested in producing an ISO 25 film since you won't supply PanF in sheets?
pauldc said:Did anyone else who gets the UK mag Black and White photography (Issue 57 March 2006) pick up the reference on page 13 (Silverprint Advertorial) that Silverprint are working on an (I quote) "...identical APX type film under another brand as the year progresses..." (Column 3, first paragraph, titled Agfa alive, well and living in...).
Somewhat cryptic but I wondered if anyone can throw some light on this. It might be relevent both for those of us who love APX100 and also those engaged in the current trend to stock up on increasingly rare and expensive old APX stock.
Also, are they refering to the Rollei films or something else. They hint in the article at a direct relationship with the original Agfa factory that made the APX films and which they state might actually still be operating though not widely known.
Anyway, it is an interesting piece and given the interest of APUG'ers for APX I thought I would share as it seems to have so far gone unnoticed on the forums.
mawz said:Here in Canada we're getting a couple of films caled Silvertone 100 and 400, which appear to be the APX emulsions on a different base (Dev times for equivalent APX work perfectly, results are very similar, especially for the 400). It's labelled as 'Made in Germany' and I suspect it's made by Efke for Agfa Canada. The Base stock is visibly thinner and more fragile, so it's definitely not cut from an APX master roll.
MMfoto said:As much as I love APX 100 and APX 400, if an APX emulsion is to resurrected dear god let it be APX 25.
Petzi said:To those who bemourn APX 25, have you tried Rollei Pan 25? It might just be the same film...
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