Marco B
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Hi Marco,
You're comments about margins at the store make sense if the mark-up is 50%. I own a retail store. The mark-up on film and paper is not near 50%. The only items in the film industry with near this type of mark-up are filters... and that's because I stock some weird IR and Infrared Filters in weird sizes for rangefinder lenses... and they still don't cost that much. Film, paper and chemicals don't have a mark-up near 50%. At least not around here.
-Rob
Back when I worked at the camera store, mark-up on film and paper averaged between 20-25%. However, a number of people had 10% off due to art classes, photo club memberships, etc which is off the retail price. In the end, the average mark-up was 10-15%; remember that that 10-15% has to cover shipping, marketing, labour (the person at the counter), rent of the store, heat/power/water, dead loss, etc. Asking photo stores to reduce their mark-up is unrealistic, especially as any unsold, out-dated product is the stores responsibility and not the manufacturer.
I think anyone who places any trust in anything any business corporation says regarding their future plans is setting themselves up for disappointment. The reality is that Kodak will keep making film so long as it makes them money, as will Ilford. Ilford may want to stay in film forever, but they may well end up bankrupt if sales drop too low for them (not saying thats happening, but we've seen lots of great companies suddenly die over the years in and out of the photo industry) and kodak may make film for as long as they exist. All you can do is buy the film you like best and support the manufacturer that way. I support Kodak because their film is better suited to my work.
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Even Ilford are edging their bets by introducing such products as Harman inkjet papers and a "bargain" range of Kentmere brand films, also exploring other non-photographic uses of silver and coating technologies(see their website).
That impresses me that they are a well-run company...while I trust them to continue making analog products while they are profitable, it seems to me that the management are realistic and would not run themselves into bankruptcy just to be the "last man standing" in B&W.
By the way, the price difference between the Netherlands and the US is absolutely shocking.
Look at these two pages, both from the same Calumet company, one in the US and one in the Netherlands though.
US: 10 sheets of Ilford Multigrade IV FB Glossy 50x60 cm (20x24") paper: $53,99
http://www.calumetphoto.com/eng/browse/categories/film/traditional-photo-paper/traditional-bw-fiber
The Netherlands: 10 sheets of Ilford Multigrade IV FB Glossy 50x60 cm (20x24") paper: 106,73 Euros!!!
http://www.calumetphoto.nl/Film:+Camera's+Doka/ZwartWit+Papier/
And the paper doesn't even have to be shipped across an ocean to get in the Netherlands!!!
Marco
By the way, the price difference between the Netherlands and the US is absolutely shocking.
Look at these two pages, both from the same Calumet company, one in the US and one in the Netherlands though.
US: 10 sheets of Ilford Multigrade IV FB Glossy 50x60 cm (20x24") paper: $53,99
http://www.calumetphoto.com/eng/browse/categories/film/traditional-photo-paper/traditional-bw-fiber
The Netherlands: 10 sheets of Ilford Multigrade IV FB Glossy 50x60 cm (20x24") paper: 106,73 Euros!!!
http://www.calumetphoto.nl/Film:+Camera's+Doka/ZwartWit+Papier/
And the paper doesn't even have to be shipped across an ocean to get in the Netherlands!!!
Marco
US: 41,83
NL: 89,69
So, somehow, the same product costs more than twice (!!!) in the Netherlands, which is very close to the UK, compared to the US.
Marco... how can this be...... thats an obscene price difference !! How do you manage to purchase at Netherlands prices ? Or do you order from abroad ?
...By the way, the shop where I bought my pack for 100 Euro, was not the Dutch branch of Calumet. But this confirms these are more or less the "regular" prices for Ilford in the Netherlands at the moment.
So, it has to be the Dutch distributor's markup, because the same product is priced 83,25€ in Germany, which is 69,96€ if you exclude VAT. Still expensive compared to the US price, but a bit more reasonable.
In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if all Ilford stock destined for Europe enters through the Netherlands (but maybe its France), first...
Fuji is leaving the business as we speak, and Kodak is too, eventually. Film isn't a commodity anymore. It's likely going to be a premium price product, reflecting a niche market.
But what other companies other than Ilford allows special orders of custom cut film?
Excellent post, Antonov....makes you think.
I'm sure that most photographic products, B&W certainly, will not become totally extinct...there may even be some revival, I know of three young people, two of whom are art students, who are keen on using the possibilities of analog work.
Color may be more difficult in small quantities, but surely small-scale pilot machines might be adapted? And there's the options of DIY and alternative processes...the latter seem to be appealing to artists as well as pure photographers.
If all else fails, we could go digital....we on APUG because we don't like it and see many disadvantages, but it's an option. If all else totally fails, I'll buy a box of artists paints and paper for my "artistic" endeavours and a digital point-and-shoot for my memories of days with the family. If I have my health, I can live with that.
railwayman3, I'm 28 years old and I do only and exclusevely analog photography. Same goes for my friend who is 33 years old and also does exclusevely analog phogotraphy ( he got infected from me, ha ha ). And we live in eastern, poorest, ravaged by war, part of our small country. I mean, if you can find that kind of individuals in small cities of small countries, imagine how many people like us are there in much bigger cities and countries. When I joined APUG it had cca 20 000 members, 2 and 1/2 years later its membership doubled and now counts 46 558 members as we speak! There is no need to be pessimistic.
Excellent...that's wonderful and inspiring to know. I've actually visited Croatia twice in recent years, and before that to the old Yugoslavia...it's a lovely country, great people...with honest and genuine values....and it was good to see the progress which is being made since the bad years.
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Why in the world you go digital if you can stay analog?
I'll only go digital if, and when, the very last analog product has disappeared, and I'm sure that won't be in my time, or in my children's or grandchildren's time!
...There is no industry or craft in history of the world that became extinct even if its today hand made in small manufactures....
Excellent...that's wonderful and inspiring to know. I've actually visited Croatia twice in recent years, and before that to the old Yugoslavia...it's a lovely country, great people...with honest and genuine values....and it was good to see the progress which is being made since the bad years.
I'll only go digital if, and when, the very last analog product has disappeared, and I'm sure that won't be in my time, or in my children's or grandchildren's time!
Getting back to the topic at hand I guess the question is, could Kodachrome be hand crafted by small manufacturers? Could there be buggy whip makers for Kodachrome? I live near several Mennonite communities so I regularly drive by wagons on the roads. Someone is still making wagons, wagon wheels, whips, and all the other traditional stuff they use; probably them making it themselves. Is Kodachrome too complicated for the photographic community to make on its own?
Getting back to the topic at hand I guess the question is, could Kodachrome be hand crafted by small manufacturers? Could there be buggy whip makers for Kodachrome? I live near several Mennonite communities so I regularly drive by wagons on the roads. Someone is still making wagons, wagon wheels, whips, and all the other traditional stuff they use; probably them making it themselves. Is Kodachrome too complicated for the photographic community to make on its own?
What a load of cr*p! I can't be polite, when I read posts like these. Can you backup your thesis with arguments?!
I think Efke does.
And, concerning title of this topic and similar in general. I really don't understand what are you people bragging about? I have 100+ rolls of film in 120 and 135 format, in my fridge at this time ( I would have more if I could have space ), and I just can't imagine I would have that number of rolls 20 years ago. I think people are becoming ungrateful brats because you have everything just with couple of clicks with your finger. I would really like to put all you braggers in 1990. or something like that, or in some Third World country. Then you would be maybe more grateful and realized how lucky you are and how things are good.
Oh, and those visions of world without film, last man standing and that sort of stuff. Oh boy. I mean, does ANY industry in the world has so many Nostradamuses like film industry? There is no industry or craft in history of the world that became extinct even if its today hand made in small manufactures. I come on this forum to rest my eyes from that digital cr*p discussion from other photo forums and NO I have to read pretty similar nonsense here. Jesus.
Excellent...that's wonderful and inspiring to know. I've actually visited Croatia twice in recent years, and before that to the old Yugoslavia...it's a lovely country, great people...with honest and genuine values....and it was good to see the progress which is being made since the bad years.
Dude. It's Nostradami.
I can only acknowledge that. First time was in 1987, Croatia, Zadar, Dubrovnik lovely holidays......
BTW an interesting detail is that Efke rised their prices with approx. 10% this Summer while their films are containing the most of Silver.
I like their Efke 25 version most. A nice film for working in landscapes in my M7 35mm and 667 roll film R.F. cameras.
Not does it matter much, but as far as I know, plural of "Nostradamus" is "Nostradamuses".
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