If as a few have speculated Harman may end up marketing products without the Ilford name, well I wish them luck. They will need it! If that is the case they should hire a PR/Social Media executive like yesterday.
Those of us who see this as a possibility know that Harman would only rebrand if it were necessary. We all known by now that the Ilford brand is licensed to Harman, and that the licence is limited but we don't know the terms of that license. One possibility is that it's up for renewal at unfavorable terms.
Who owns the rights to the name "Ilford" ?
If Harman rebrands everything Harman will there be Chinese HP5 and Multigrade paper being sold?
Goodness I hope not.
There is absolutely nothing in even the wildest speculation to suggest that.
And up-thread I did point out that Harman also own "HP5", "FP4", and "Made in Mobberly" as trademarks.
Perhaps my neurodivergent brain assumes that people understand corporate structures, branding and related matters better than that do?
In short, the phoenix suggests something being reborn. Logic strongly suggests that this new product cannot be sold by Harman under the name "Ilford". The trademark "Harman Phoenix" has been registered by Harman Technology of Mobberly for use in manufactur of unexposed film, chemicals etc.
Ergo it could be colour film. But that seems like a pipe dream given the complexities involved in its manufacture. If Harman have perfected production of C41 film, even if they have help from Fuji, that would be astounding.
The other possibility would seem to be that they're forced into rebranding Ilford products as Harman.
I think we all agree that would be unwise unless necessary. Ilford is a long established, trusted name. Many of us will even have some sentimental connection to it. Such a rebrand wouldn't be taken lightly. Yet it remains a possibility.