I've wondered of the Lomochrome Purple* film was the opening shot for this technology. If so, that gives you an idea of the necessary volume. Then there is that agreement that KA has with Lomography. Maybe that is how Lomo gets medium volume batches of "wierd" films. They seem to like E6 products.
Not quite true! Films were made at Harrow. Find out how and where the Lomo Purple film was made and you may have your answer.
*OK, for the record, I had read somewhere that Purple is a Kodak Aero film that was resurrected and made by Kodak. If I am wrong, "Never Mind" (Apologies to Emily Litella)
I haven't followed closely the Lomochrome, but wasn't it made by Inoviscoat who is related to Agfa? I gathered around that they are the newest player (their machinery derives from Agfa's and some of it is quite new).
Mirko of Adox mentioned that they have no interest in pursuing film manufacturing on their own, but anyone can go to them and develop film products. So Lomo did. Some part of the IP instant is made by them as well, and they appear in the coating part of the "how it is made" doc video.
I like when the discussion is directed towards an approach to low volume manufacture. I am quite enthusiastic about Harrow, their past manufacturing and the possible conversion to film manufacture if needed. But PE mentioned a series of difficulties and it wouldn't be feasible on the short run; I can't find the post.
Ilford do run a Film/paper single installation, so why KA couldn't? Indeed, but I forgot about those specific challenges.
Forgotten ideas: Kodak made a 400 speed Kodachrome and sent it out for trade trial. It was fine grained and sharp with all of the Kodachrome benefits but was totally rejected by the photo magazine editors and test customers as being irrelevant in the face of E6. It was never marketed. There were improved versions of the other products under way as well and it was all shut down. This was in the '90s.
[...]
And finally, the week that Kodachrome was cancelled the manager of that division "retired". My guess is that she told Perez that cancelling the flagship product was ungood and he said "your retired". Just a guess and a rumor at EK. After all, he told me that Kodak was losing money on B&W papers but my thought was that many others made a profit from making them. Oh well. Dan, you were here when this "retirement" took place. I think we talked about it at lunch. So, here it is as a thought only.
Kodachrome was being coated about once every 2 years with the minimum # of master rolls being made. Even so, the stock was not selling out and as noted earlier here, it was being sold with short dates. Finally, it pretty much stopped moving at the dealers and something HAD to be done.
Now, if you note the 60,000+ membership of APUG and the # of people posting on Kodachrome, you may figure out that Kodak did something painful but smart.
PE
I am happy to have been able to shoot a bit of it and give it a farewell, at the very end of it all. It was on a continuous descent for these 20 years and PE has explained
ad infinitum what happened with it.
I see that a little thing, marketing wise, could have been done before the very end. But it may have been useful
just for an extra manufacturing cycle. Supposing Kodak was as Ilford is, close to the customer. They could have said: Well people, Kodachrome is in the threshold of being discontinued, we've had suboptimal results with the past manufacture. We need more customer involvement.
Perhaps it would have woken up people a bit, like it did after the discontinuance, and the sense of danger would "rev up a bit the engines". Perhaps they could have followed a prefinancing/customer funding stance.
On a marketing perspective that manager was right... As Dan mentioned (same Dan? Kodachrome project Dan) The news about Kodachrome being dead equalled Kodak being dead to the layman.