Thomas.Goehler
Member
The point of this thread is the presumably "good" news regarding a film revival, maintained by Mr Serger.
The thread title is 'interesting...' It is of interest to me that we spend very little time on this fora talking about colour wet printing problems... But Fuji are still selling it
.
But Fuji's main customers are industrial finishers.
Henning is an optimist yes but that is an independent matter.
I think, Henning is whistling in the dark (as a German proverb has it) and I guess he knows it, too...
Thomas.Goehler,
you think and you guess too much.
Are you Mac or PC?![]()
...but I do not see a large-scale revival anywhere on the horizon, no mattter what Henning Serger's phantasy lets you believe.
So, Henning, everybody who has got a different opinion from yours is a hater and a ridiculous liar?
As I said, I like film-based photography very much, but I am a realist whereas you are a propagandist, possibly fuelled by some yet unknown source (or why do you propagate these "news" at the moment across several forums at the same time?).
Example?
Of course you can get E6 or C41 developed in a day or two, but then you pay!
The ordinary photographer wants to go to the drugstore next door and get decent pics. This is hardly possible anymore. I live next door to a Rossmann drugstore which sends films to a Fuji lab. If I bring my films on Monday I might get them back by Thursday or Friday. Quality is lousy compared to prints from the 90s,
Film will survive in a little niche, it will be for experts and die-hard fans and it won't be cheap.
... Enjoy it while we've got it!
Well I guess the thread has degenerated to nothingness.
I think I will stop at Walgreen's on the way home and buy four rolls of Fujifilm Xtra400 for $12.
I'm not sure what there is to argue about here. I doubt Fujifilm is checking internet forums to interpret their sales figures. Likewise, I doubt that naysaying and declaring "Film is dead!" matters to anyone who has any influence over manufacturing.
Processing times in big cities are shorter than elsewhere. If one needs a lab that can turn around E-6 or C-41 in 4 hours, they exist in major markets like New York and Los Angeles, where one is more likely to need such a service. From here in Hawai'i, I can ship to LA, three days there by regular Priority Mail, one day there, three days back; and quicker if I have enough of a reason to justify FedEx overnight service.
For consumers, I think the main attraction of the smartphone is the combination of photography and communication. Families and friends are all spread out in different cities, and it's much easier to share electronic images and video than prints. Eventually they'll all disappear, but so will grandma, and she wants those pictures of her grandkids NOW, and isn't complaining about the image quality on her laptop screen or her smartphone.
That said, I've seen Instax cameras in the wild here, being used by ordinary families, not hipsters who think it's cool, but just regular folks who want to share prints on the spot, and have people close at hand to share them with. I suspect the popularity of instant cameras in Japan bleeds over to Hawai'i as well, since we have a large Japanese-American population, many of whom visit the home country, and lots of Asian tourists.
Enjoy it while we've got it!
Those that want to do photography use film, and those that can't use digital.
“East is East and West is West and never the twain shall meet,” http://www.crisismagazine.com/2014/good-fencesVery open-minded and inclusive of you.
East is East and West is West and never the twain shall meet, http://www.crisismagazine.com/2014/good-fences
Those that want to do photography use film, and those that can't use digital.
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