Ricardo Miranda
Member
Actually, this kind of makes sense - since virtually nobody is printing anything any more anyway, this odd bird which always was a bit of a niche market doesn't have a big market share. It really is best for printing on RA-4 paper. It works, well enough, when printed on fiber paper, but the folks who are going to keep black-and-white film alive are the ones who are going to home process and do their own enlarging, not the target market for this film. That, and the advent of instagram filters and the like make me surprised this film lasted as long as it did. Unless Kodak goes completely tits up quickly, I see them ending up with a similar palette of films to Ilford - Tri-X for a traditional grain emulsion, TMax 100 and 400 for T-grain emulsions, plus the Portras and Ektar 100. If I HAD to lay speculation on what would go next, I'd say it would be Portra 800 - it's expensive, and relatively low volume compared to the others. But I'm not speculating.
I'm sure they could have been a market, if only KA would PROMOTE their films.
Despite the one and only APUGer I can recall saying that he prefers this to XP2+, isn't the general view that XP2+ is the better film and one which prints better on B&W paper. It might be that sales volumes of BWCN400 v XP2+ reflects this so its a sensible rationalisation of the product range.
I only tried it once and had it processed and developed by Jessops, as was. I wasn't impressed with it compared to XP2+. Even on colour paper it somehow didn't look right. There still seemed to be a colour cast.
It was also competing against the Fuji equivalent as well. Maybe just too many chromogenic films for the market to sustain.
pentaxuser
I'm sure they could have been a market, if only KA would PROMOTE their films.
If I HAD to lay speculation on what would go next, I'd say it would be Portra 800...
Why do you care? You're "quitting film," right?Hope not. Portra 800 is fantastic...
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