Theo Sulphate
Member
... When DoD stopped subsidizing HIE, Kodak could not longer afford to make HIE and maintain the HIE processing capability.
Interesting - I didn't know that. Thank you.
... When DoD stopped subsidizing HIE, Kodak could not longer afford to make HIE and maintain the HIE processing capability.
You can get Trix at any grocery store and combines well with milk.
I think the idea of old films having "a lot of silver" or recent films having "too few amounts of silver" is a myth, probably started by EFKE when they marketed their films as "silver-rich".
If you can achieve good, high D-max (maximum density) with a film, then what's the use on worrying about how much silver is there in?
I'll leave Photo Engineer to educate us on this one.
WOW !This guy on the Film Photographers groups is telling everyone that he will develop your Kodachrome rolls for $25. The results are mediocre with some decent color shifts but it is color and Kodachrome (You will need to be a member of the Film Photographer's group to view) https://www.facebook.com/groups/119931904758842/permalink/1226654574086564/
What thread is this?I have posted my suggestions for improved processing in the other thread.
PE
This guy on the Film Photographers groups is telling everyone that he will develop your Kodachrome rolls for $25. The results are mediocre with some decent color shifts but it is color and Kodachrome (You will need to be a member of the Film Photographer's group to view) https://www.facebook.com/groups/119931904758842/permalink/1226654574086564/
*barfs*In for all of the Lomographers to buy up old Kodachrome stock so they can have this gentleman process them with those sweet sweet colour shifts.
In for all of the Lomographers to buy up old Kodachrome stock so they can have this gentleman process them with those sweet sweet colour shifts.
In for all of the Lomographers to buy up old Kodachrome stock so they can have this gentleman process them with those sweet sweet colour shifts.
Somebody needs to tell the new US President that, Bill Clinton had faster and better infrared film than He does. And that undocumented workers are easily spotted with HIE. That would probably be enoughFor decades the US Department of Defense paid Kodak to continue making HIE after digital IR imaging was perfected and widely in use just so that IR film would available in case they ever decided that DoD needed it again. HIE was considered a national asset. When DoD stopped subsidizing HIE, Kodak could not longer afford to make HIE and maintain the HIE processing capability.
I think in this day and age of instant gratification, the idea of sending a film away, possibly to a foreign country, to be processed with a time frame in weeks will render it commercially unviable.
There is a difference between dropping off some E6 have having it back in 4 hours, or my local drugstore still does C41 in an hour and Kodachrome. The last few rolls that I sent to Dwanes were about a month from when I mailed them to when they came back by mail.Then why shoot film in the fist place?
Then why shoot film in the fist place?
There is a difference. But I think this difference doens't matter to someone who is driven by instant gratification. Someone who wants results in seconds or minutes doesn't even care to bother waiting for hours or days.There is a difference between dropping off some E6 have having it back in 4 hours, or my local drugstore still does C41 in an hour and Kodachrome. The last few rolls that I sent to Dwanes were about a month from when I mailed them to when they came back by mail.
My thoughts as well. That's why I personally don't mind waiting for weeks.The long wait could - if Kodachrome comes back - somehow contribute to the "mystic" of the material, something to lay down and wait, like cheese, sauercraut, or wine. The sweet waiting for the postman... the joy of reliving the emotion of the shots when the memories begin fading... the entire opposite of what people do now with smartphones, looking at the world in front of them through the pictures they have taken a moment before.
I agree, I couldnt care how long I would wait to get something special back to me in the mail.There is a difference. But I think this difference doens't matter to someone who is driven by instant gratification. Someone who wants results in seconds or minutes doesn't even care to bother waiting for hours or days.
My thoughts as well. That's why I personally don't mind waiting for weeks.
Restarting Kodachrome would cannibalize sales of new Ektachrome. I don't know if there is enough demand among still photographers to make Ektachrome sustainable, and like many, suspect the main driving force behind the re-emergence of Ektachrome relates to Kodak's Super 8 film initiative. Unless Kodak sees some market in Super 8, Kodachrome's return is unlikely. Since most Super8 film will eventually be scanned, software could be used to make Ektachrome look like Kodachrome.
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