mshchem
Subscriber
Now I think it's 220!







I cannot see Harman producing anything that uses environmentally degrading chemistry as in colour papers or films.
Yes. But it excludes 35mm which is a very large and significant format that has the boradest outreach. 220 has always been a niche even in the pro days and should not run into Ilford branding issues. Harman HP5 220 vs Ilford HP5 in 220 can be so.220 would kind of make sense with the phoenix, but not with the money, time and effort on a complete new branding exercise.
I just dunno. It's all intriguing. And it's getting us talking. Which means, so far, it's working. If it turns out to be something of a let down, it could backfire. I notice on Instagram they are promising that it won't be a letdown.
So I now confidently predict that Harman is going into the packaging industry and are introducing a cardboard box.
Harman have changed packaging in the last few years to make the Harman name more prominent. Could this be part of a longer term strategy?
According to professional labs, many people don't want the developed film back and they are ok just with the scans. I think it would make sense to produced film with a biodegradable base for these cases where the interest in long term storage is null.
Kodak sold the rights to manufacture their chemistry so it's not so simple for someone else to manufacture the exact formulae, and use the trade names. D76 is different because it was essentially an open source formula use around the world in the cine industry before WWII, so many companies made D76, Defender (Dupont) 6, Ilford ID-11, May & Baker 320 and many more.
Ian
Ditto.- We desperately need a much better and affordable multi format scanner.
A multi-format film scanner would be useful for me....110, 127, 120 and 135. But I suspect that if such a thing really were easy to bring to market, then epson or Plustek or one of the generic scanner brands would have done so already. Good idea though, and it might be something that Harman would prefer to brand with their name over Ilford or Kentmere.
I would agree that quality home scanning made easier would help sell more film. Especially if the device was reasonably compact and not too expensive yet gave excellent quality. Speed is another thing, the flatbed solution works in terms of quality but it can take an hour to scan one 35mm film on there.
They already do the Ilford dark tent, which is a tad small but does provide a pop up dark room.
I just dunno. It's all intriguing. And it's getting us talking. Which means, so far, it's working. If it turns out to be something of a let down, it could backfire. I notice on Instagram they are promising that it won't be a letdown.
Yes!!!!!![]()
... unless they're going to sell actual self-immolating parrots.
This has taken a bit too long, hasn't it?
Why do I keep yawning?
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