yep, I’m in Sonoma County. We’ve been in lockdown since early this week. I still have mail service and film is still showing up in the mail to be processed, and my amazon and ebay storefronts are still up and running, I called the city business licensing division in my city and asked them if I had to close and they said that I had to close to the public, but could continue to operate the parts of my business that I could do that did not require face to face interactions, so mailing out film people bought, and processing/scanning film are still on, but portraits, local film drop off/pickups, darkroom/studio rental, etc are off. It’s going to be this way for a while.
Unfortunately, many if not all of my suppliers have closed up shop, so once I’m sold out of what film I have on hand, that’s it unless I can find a source that is still open and willing to ship to me. Strangely enough, the rate at which that much of it has been selling at, I’ll be completely out of most of it by the end of the month. It’s bad enough that I’ve lost a significant chunk of income for the foreseeable future in not being able to take appointments, but once my stock runs out I effectively won’t have that income either.
Hopefully we’re only in lockdown for a few more weeks, otherwise this is going to really hurt for a lot of small business owners.
Can you order from suppliers directly in Japan or elsewhere? Even if you have to pay and charge more for film, or sell it at little profit, at least you'll keep your customers supplied so they stay with you and not drift to other competitors. Also, they would then be able to still send you film for processing so you can make sales from the back end of processing, scanning, etc. Good luck.yep, I’m in Sonoma County. We’ve been in lockdown since early this week. I still have mail service and film is still showing up in the mail to be processed, and my amazon and ebay storefronts are still up and running, I called the city business licensing division in my city and asked them if I had to close and they said that I had to close to the public, but could continue to operate the parts of my business that I could do that did not require face to face interactions, so mailing out film people bought, and processing/scanning film are still on, but portraits, local film drop off/pickups, darkroom/studio rental, etc are off. It’s going to be this way for a while.
Unfortunately, many if not all of my suppliers have closed up shop, so once I’m sold out of what film I have on hand, that’s it unless I can find a source that is still open and willing to ship to me. Strangely enough, the rate at which that much of it has been selling at, I’ll be completely out of most of it by the end of the month. It’s bad enough that I’ve lost a significant chunk of income for the foreseeable future in not being able to take appointments, but once my stock runs out I effectively won’t have that income either.
Hopefully we’re only in lockdown for a few more weeks, otherwise this is going to really hurt for a lot of small business owners.
Can you order from suppliers directly in Japan or elsewhere? Even if you have to pay and charge more for film, or sell it at little profit, at least you'll keep your customers supplied so they stay with you and not drift to other competitors. Also, they would then be able to still send you film for processing so you can make sales from the back end of processing, scanning, etc. Good luck.
Hopefully we’re only in lockdown for a few more weeks, otherwise this is going to really hurt for a lot of small business owners.
Hello Adrian,
yes, I completely agree. There is a real danger especially for the small business owners. One part of my scientific analysing work is data analysing of the photo industry. And the data coming in lately is unfortunately very bad. Film production, film distribution and photo-lab operation has been all a low(est) margin business for many years, and most companies - especially the small ones - don't have big enough / sufficient financial resources / savings to overcome such a strong (maybe long) crisis we are facing now.
My fear is that some very well reputed companies - including labs - which have worked extremely hard in the last years for their customers and the film community and film revival may be knocked out in the coming weeks / months by the Corona crisis.
At least I will do all I can to support and help. Just this week I make a bigger order (which was originally planned for summer) of film and chemistry to help now and as soon as possible. I hope others will do that as well.
All the best to you and all the other very passionate lab-owners like Felim here, hopefully you all can survive this storm!
Best regards from Germany,
Henning
There is a real danger especially for the small business owners. One part of my scientific analysing work is data analysing of the photo industry. And the data coming in lately is unfortunately very bad. Film production, film distribution and photo-lab operation has been all a low(est) margin business for many years, and most companies - especially the small ones - don't have big enough / sufficient financial resources / savings to overcome such a strong (maybe long) crisis we are facing now.
My fear is that some very well reputed companies - including labs - which have worked extremely hard in the last years for their customers and the film community and film revival may be knocked out in the coming weeks / months by the Corona crisis.
I just spent thousand on a new 4x5 camera, lenses etc. I just hope I stay healthy enough to use any camera I have what with this virus going on. I'll be just thankful for that.We were on such a good run and now this...
And since you made this post Henning, things have gotten even worse. If this crisis well exceeds that of the 2008-09 economic crash as it looks like it will....this could literally put film, paper and chemistry out of business. Personally I have enough film and even chemistry to last me the rest of my career. But paper is what I am short on, maybe a year or two worth if I work carefully.
If I can't source silver gel paper, I am SOL on what has been an enormous investment, a truly sobering thought.
I'm deeply concerned.
just purchased $500 worth of film from B+H in New York....every little bit helps but I figured if this goes on for a while then at least I have film!!
I do coat my own paper for POP prints so no problem there!!
The situation easily becomes overwhelming and thinking too much about systemic implications, I just don't do. Living by blocks of few days. In optimistic cases, by a couple months there may be an improvement overall and ease of the lockdowns (at least); but at worst it could get very ugly. It is already taking a heavy toll on many.We were on such a good run and now this...
And since you made this post Henning, things have gotten even worse. If this crisis well exceeds that of the 2008-09 economic crash as it looks like it will....this could literally put film, paper and chemistry out of business. Personally I have enough film and even chemistry to last me the rest of my career. But paper is what I am short on, maybe a year or two worth if I work carefully.
If I can't source silver gel paper, I am SOL on what has been an enormous investment, a truly sobering thought.
I'm deeply concerned.
We also are in partial lockdown,allowed out for 2 hours per day, but we are allowed to drive to and from beaches Etc for dai;y exorcise, shopping or medical reasons's and prety much everything is shut down, only food shops,diy pharmacy's are open, o more than 2 people and police have been given powers to break larger groups up, initialy for 4 weeks, but who knows, all building sites close on friday, buses are still runing but very much reduced services,no taxis, but this will pass in time and hopefully we will all come out the other end strongerSince I last wrote to this thread the UK has of course instigated what I would call a "partial lockdown" though many people are screaming "LOCKDOWN!!". We don't yet need paperwork or ID in order to leave the house. All places of entertainment and anything other than essential shops (food, pet food, pharmacy, DIY/hardware, newsagents) are enforcably closed. Police can and do ask people to stop gathering in groups of more than two and have the power to ask people where they're going and why - this is not usually the case here at all and special laws were passed. Thankfully these will self-destruct in a maximum of two years. It's necessary, if a necessary evil...for the time being....to get the spread of the virus under control. I saw the police shut down a hand car wash a few days ago - quite correct in these circumstances.
Of course that means my oft-mentioned Luton Camera Repairs shop is closed. As the staff don't live very near the shop they've decided not to continue with mail order for the time being. I've been in contact with Jane who does the film processing and she's confident they will re-open when permitted. She's even offered to hand deliver me film if I want to buy any though I shall probably wait.
I am fortunate that not 30 seconds from my front door is a wooded area and a grass path lined with lovely trees. I can take my "government sanctioned constitutional walk" there every morning and encounter fewer humans than I do birds. People are observing the two metre rule and it's quite lovely to be able to go out for a bit of a walk among the trees and birds. Sometimes I take a camera with me, varying B&W film, colour film and digital. So I'll have a handful of C41 films for her to develop when she's able to re open.
Tough times if shops are still expected to pay rent/mortgage/business rates. I hope everyone here who runs a camera shop or processing lab is able to get back into operation when restrictions are lifted.
We can order pizza from two places that I would otherwise walk to for pick-up, but their systems are limited to delivery plus leave at the door.
I never realized how big Navajo land is. My wife and I did a auto tour of the Southwest National Parks. Our first leg was from Santa Fe, New Mexico to Monument Valley that border Arizona and Utah via the Four Corners and past Shiprock. It was around 380 ,miles of mostly dry high desert area, all own by them except fo occasional small towns. Monument Valley, also owner by the Navajo was great. They had a beautiful motel we stayed out overlooking the valley. It had great breakfasts and dinners but no alcohol on Navajo land is allowed. I remember see round plots of land that were watered from storage tanks I believe and used for farming. But these were very few.... restaurants are still open for curbside pickup here in New Mexico...mail and UPS still on the job. We're opening two formerly shuttered hospitals etc etc. We have 2 Air Force bases and nobody has mentioned them as vectors yet. We are blessed with huge barren desert wilderness here but like everywhere hikers are a minority. The adjoining Navajo Nation is half a million widely scattered and mostly with no running water. Just received a letter from a 9th grade Navajo girl expressing fear...most Navajo are cursed with TV and no intelligent media.
I never realized how big Navajo land is. My wife and I did a auto tour of the Southwest National Parks. Our first leg was from Santa Fe, New Mexico to Monument Valley that border Arizona and Utah via the Four Corners and past Shiprock. It was around 380 ,miles of mostly dry high desert area, all own by them except fo occasional small towns. Monument Valley, also owner by the Navajo was great. They had a beautiful motel we stayed out overlooking the valley. It had great breakfasts and dinners but no alcohol on Navajo land is allowed. I remember see round plots of land that were watered from storage tanks I believe and used for farming. But these were very few.
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