FILM Ferrania
Member
Why not sending master rolls to Ilford for finishing?
That's an excellent question! I wish I knew the entire answer.
Why not sending master rolls to Ilford for finishing?
Could you enlighten us on roughly how much film area or rolls of film this would relate to?
I can agree to that, pointless given the miss-communications. I thought we were still talking about finishing costs, since that was the most recent part of cost that was specifically identified by stage of processing (post number 3597) before I posted my questions, so I incorrectly assumed that "production run" was still referring to finishing costs. I apologize for misinterpreting the thread of the discussion....That is why so much of this discussion is pointless...
PE
LOL. I think we all know the answer to that! If Kodak can't make backing paper now, how could a MUCH smaller operation (like Ferrania) do that?will also the backing paper be produced inside Ferrania?
LOL. I think we all know the answer to that! If Kodak can't make backing paper now, how could a MUCH smaller operation (like Ferrania) do that?
LOL. I think we all know the answer to that! If Kodak can't make backing paper now, how could a MUCH smaller operation (like Ferrania) do that?
Because they preserved the machines instead of nuking them as Kodak?LOL. I think we all know the answer to that! If Kodak can't make backing paper now, how could a MUCH smaller operation (like Ferrania) do that?
LOL. I think we all know the answer to that! If Kodak can't make backing paper now, how could a MUCH smaller operation (like Ferrania) do that?
LOL. I think we all know the answer to that! If Kodak can't make backing paper now, how could a MUCH smaller operation (like Ferrania) do that?
It is the chemistry and papers that are hard to make.
PE
The same carbon black that goes into remjet?Backing paper uses carbon black which is often made from tallow or coal. These contain many sulfur residues which can ruin film! Kodak was much bigger than either 3M or Ferrania and still is AAMOF. And Kodak is now no longer making their own.
PE
Backing paper uses carbon black which is often made from tallow or coal. These contain many sulfur residues which can ruin film! Kodak was much bigger than either 3M or Ferrania and still is AAMOF. And Kodak is now no longer making their own.
PE
Mitsubishi Chemical seams to be competent to produce the right stuff.No, lamp soot, gas flames
http://www.carbonblack.jp/en/cb/seizou.html
Yes PE the ink (hope this is not a unknown abrivation to me like "I. N.everK.now" ) the ink (to set markings on backing paper) is possible the main failure from alternate backing paper manufacturers - I easily could imagine.I repeat --- INK.
PE
Backing paper uses carbon black which is often made from tallow or coal. These contain many sulfur residues which can ruin film! Kodak was much bigger than either 3M or Ferrania and still is AAMOF. And Kodak is now no longer making their own.
PE
Yes, possibly a lost art....Perhaps it's a lost art, like Altichrome.![]()
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