Mogens
Member
When I go on vacation I take the attitude that it is my patriotic duty to fart money and enjoy myself. I have extended this attitude to film prices year-round.
Empty nester?

When I go on vacation I take the attitude that it is my patriotic duty to fart money and enjoy myself. I have extended this attitude to film prices year-round.
When I go on vacation I take the attitude that it is my patriotic duty to fart money and enjoy myself. I have extended this attitude to film prices year-round.
When I go on vacation I take the attitude that it is my patriotic duty to fart money and enjoy myself. I have extended this attitude to film prices year-round.
When I go on vacation I take the attitude that it is my patriotic duty to fart money and enjoy myself. I have extended this attitude to film prices year-round.
Didn't they say something similar about oil and watercolour painting when photography became a vable alternative? That is still going strong.
For what it is worth I feel the initial question was more of a 'dig' at film photographers than a good honest question with any merit.
I wasn't taking a dig at film photographers. I was simply pointing out that nobody seems to be buying film gear as much as before, so I think anyone getting into film is probably done with a few exceptions. Therefore the craze is over and prices will probably fall a lot.
The price of gear is totally market-driven, since there are practically no new film cameras being made, nor lenses that will work with them. Trends, fans, collectors and rarity will determine those prices which could fluctuate quite a bit. Film prices, on the other hand are dependent on the cost of raw materials, manufacturing and distribution--plus demand. I don't see those going down much in the near future.Craze and gear prices have rather little connection. Gear is bought by shooters, collectors, and need-another crowd. Film is largely not good for collecting long term. Film purchases have been steadily increasing, only time will tell if industry is looking at steady demand long term. But gear will continue to hit market and I don't see prices falling, barring some major tragedy affecting a lot of population and seriously changing their priorities.
Current trends are not good indicators of anything due to ongoing war and still unknown end result, as well as inflation etc. Once all these things settle down, film prices hopefully drop 10-15%, and gear is going to regain momentum in sales.
The price of gear is totally market-driven, since there are practically no new film cameras being made, nor lenses that will work with them. Trends, fans, collectors and rarity will determine those prices which could fluctuate quite a bit. Film prices, on the other hand are dependent on the cost of raw materials, manufacturing and distribution--plus demand. I don't see those going down much in the near future.
Inflation levels now might be near historic levels, but they have been this high as recently as the 70s and 80s. Shit happens.I agree on film prices, but raw materials / production costs are always easy excuses to add on profit margin (we saw that with petrol prices and oil majors' significant net profit jumps). For the most part there are still accountants in those offices looking not only to protect bottom line (and clear tax audits), but to find better positive margins.
What I am hoping for is that once inflation drops from these rather historic levels, the lag to adjust will not take forever. One can only hope film will catch another breath of sanity in how it is priced.
Inflation levels now might be near historic levels, but they have been this high as recently as the 70s and 80s. Shit happens.
A company is deserving of profit. Why else are they in business? Of course, shareholders expect profits, too. Companies that cut quality, personnel, pay and benefits for the sake of profits are basically evil in my view. Companies that use any excuse to jack up prices, like the aforementioned oil companies, are quite unethical, too.
Damn the Kodak haters!
In olden days, it was entirely appropriate to discuss Kodak profits and oil company profits in the same sentence.
Now it is entirely appropriate to compare it with other small cap companies, with around 4,000 employees - only a relatively small portion of which are involved with film.
It's not "hating" Kodak to recognize that their prices are too high. More and more often you see people saying they've switched to Ilford or Foma for b&w or thye've given up colour because the cost of film is too high. The people saying that, on this forum, are the people who are likely to continue shooting film once the current fad falls into obscurity. And they all accompany their statements with "Kodak ___ film is the best, but I can't afford it, anymore."
That's not hatred. That's sadness, man. Sadness.
Oil prices are driven for a long time by government regulation reducing oil production in the US and the OPEC cartel (they just dropped oil production deliberately by 1 1/2 millions barrels a day which will raise prices for all the oil companies and higher prices on everything including film).
Like you say Kodak (Eastman) raises prices as does Kodak Alaris based on material costs going up, labor cost going up etc. Unlike oil companies and OPEC, they have little power over these other things and are victims of inflation just as we ordinary mortals are.
Also, there are so many film companies and emulsions. Competition is working to keep greed down.
One trip to the pharmacy for my prescriptions and the change in film prices easily go unnoticed. Or a trip to the gas station. <<insert many other examples here>>
Like you say Kodak (Eastman) raises prices as does Kodak Alaris based on material costs going up, labor cost going up etc. Unlike oil companies and OPEC, they have little power over these other things and are victims of inflation just as we ordinary mortals are.
... and it's got nothing to do with my magnetic personality![]()
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