Photo Engineer
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IDK how many research machines still exist nor do I know their condition. They might make usable product, but you would need a slitter, chopper and perfer. You would need spooling equipment for 35mm or interleaving equipment for sheet film. You would need an emulsion engineer and a coating engineer. Etc!!!
So, Kevin, what is your point?
If you bought one, who will make the emulsion, design the coatings, get your support and package it?
PE
So, Kevin, what is your point?
If you bought one, who will make the emulsion, design the coatings, get your support and package it?
PE
Kevin, the studios are increasingly going the digital route.
Day's salary? Right now at B&H a 36x roll of Provia 400 is $6.49. Dwayne's charges $8.95 for processing. Add $4.50 shipping, though it's much less per roll if you have more than one roll processed. Total $19.94. A minimum wage burger flipper earns more than that in three hours, maybe 3.5 hours after withholdings, and most people aren't minimum wage burger flippers.
I will grant that the price of transparency film has skyrocketed, and very recently, so much so and so recently that I wasn't even aware of it until I checked just now as I bought my last batch late last year (about half of which is still in my freezer.) Provia 400 is $10.99 at B&H and a whopping $15.49 at Freestyle. The latter is outrageous when you can get it for almost 30% less from B&H. Still, it's an amazingly good film and it's worth even the $15 to me. (But not when I can get it for $10 just as easily!)
Trying to make film cheap is the wrong tactic. Make it as good as possible, make it the thing to shoot, make it popular, and people will pay for it. You're never going to compete with the marginal cost per shot of digital, which is basically free once the equipment is purchased. So don't try. If people want it they will pay what it costs (I am not talking, obviously, about $50 a roll and another $50 for processing or anything like that - within reason) and if more and more people want it there will be competition and economies of scale and the price will come down, at least some. That can happen, but obviously not to the degree of the old days.
US$20 is approximately RMB¥120 which is easily a day's wage in China. That is where I am talking about.
We need cheap slide film as an entry point. Once people try it and like it, they can move up the ladder to the more expensive and higher quality Fuji products. The high price of those products is too much of a barrier to entry into shooting E6. Once we get a cheaper alternative, you will see more consumption, and lower prices overall because of the increased economies of scale. Tons of people in China like shooting film, and tons more would like to start, but we need those price barriers to come down. It will benefit film shooters everywhere, not just in China.
This is why I'm thinking a Chinese buyer for Kodak might be a good idea. The market in China is potentially huge, but gaining access to it is tough and requires lower price points, because people here simply don't have the money like in western countries. Kodak is already a household name in China though, and there are Kodak branded shops all across the country. So it might be a good match.
Most of you seem to be unaware of the new Kodak product introduced recently. They now make an archival color print film for storage of master copies of digital motion pictures. This is their effort to give the digital world a method of backing up images.
What cameras are made in Canada?
This sounds similar to what happened when the former Agfaphoto closed down.APX 100 coated in 2005 is still available today.Coating and storing may be the most economical way to close production?Here is the idea. What if someone were to buy Kodak, not with the idea of running the machines forever, but rather running the machines for a few weeks, or a few months at most, and make enough film to last forever? Then the film would need to stored somewhere. The machines could be scrapped, and the real estate converted to condos or whatever.
[...] and (b) when super high-definition is released in 10 years, they can re-scan the film to produce a higher resolution product. So even if Hollywood went entirely digital in the shooting, the storage will still be analog.
US$20 is approximately RMB¥120 which is easily a day's wage in China. That is where I am talking about.
This is why I'm thinking a Chinese buyer for Kodak might be a good idea. The market in China is potentially huge, but gaining access to it is tough and requires lower price points, because people here simply don't have the money like in western countries. Kodak is already a household name in China though, and there are Kodak branded shops all across the country. So it might be a good match.
I'm pretty sure no one in China is going to end up using film, regardless of the cost. One of my friends is a film photographer that lives in Chengdu, Sichuan. He constantly tells me about how as soon as people make enough money to buy a decent camera, they run to a DSLR, usually the most expensive one they can afford. He is constantly annoyed at the fact that there are thousands of D3s in China stuck in P because they think that the more money you spend on the camera, the better the picture. It's going to be all but impossible to tell them that technology that is, at its core, over 100 years old is better than the latest and greatest.
Besides, Even if they would try this, there's no reason to try it with slide film. Most people want either a print or a digital file as the final product. Slides are not the best product to use in either situation (and this is coming from someone whose workflow is 75% E-6). If you want a print, you have to find someone that can scan an individual slide and then print it. Since it's not the lab's standard workflow, the cost will be higher than scanning and printing a negative. If you want a digital file, you have to scan it, which adds a major step compared to digital.
I love film as much as the next guy, but China will not be the solution to Kodak's problems.
I'm pretty sure no one in China is going to end up using film, regardless of the cost. One of my friends is a film photographer that lives in Chengdu, Sichuan. He constantly tells me about how as soon as people make enough money to buy a decent camera, they run to a DSLR, usually the most expensive one they can afford. He is constantly annoyed at the fact that there are thousands of D3s in China stuck in P because they think that the more money you spend on the camera, the better the picture. It's going to be all but impossible to tell them that technology that is, at its core, over 100 years old is better than the latest and greatest.
Besides, Even if they would try this, there's no reason to try it with slide film. Most people want either a print or a digital file as the final product. Slides are not the best product to use in either situation (and this is coming from someone whose workflow is 75% E-6). If you want a print, you have to find someone that can scan an individual slide and then print it. Since it's not the lab's standard workflow, the cost will be higher than scanning and printing a negative. If you want a digital file, you have to scan it, which adds a major step compared to digital.
I love film as much as the next guy, but China will not be the solution to Kodak's problems.
... but rather running the machines for a few weeks, or a few months at most, and make enough film to last forever?
...film producers to capture using film technology...
Brian;
Kodak can coat master rolls faster than one per day. They can make enough for the whole world in one day!!
PE
I need to go on vacation to Shanghai - how are the prices compared to North American for both film and cameras?
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