Kodak Before the Demolition

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Kevin Kehler

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Obvious, I disagree with this photographers' idea (and subsequent book) about the death of analogue photography. However, a number of his photos inside Kodak Canada, Polaroid and Ilford are pretty interesting. At least he shot a lot on 4x5 film. The chemical mix room (#12) is my favorite but it should be in B&W.

http://cnnphotos.blogs.cnn.com/2012/11/05/the-death-of-film/?hpt=hp_c3
 
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#08 Dwayne's Photo — Kodachrome Lab (Open)

What a shame...

And how did frames #14 and #18 from Mobberley make it into a piece about the Death of Film?

Ken
 

MattKing

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The story talks about how Burley has also been documenting how the smaller alternatives to what was once a huge industry have also sprung up - essentially he is trying to document the transformation.
 
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Maybe he should have titled it "The Transformation of Film?"

Or "The Rebirth of Film?"

Death is kinda' permanent...

Ken
 

MDR

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Film is like Dracula sexy and undead :smile:

Dominik
 

batwister

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I suppose, as an artist, we're fooled into believing he has the gift of foresight. On the other hand, maybe he's read too many APUG threads. Hopefully the series will look as misjudged in 10 years as it does boring now.
 

DREW WILEY

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All you have to do is drive down the street from here to the "recycling" dropoff where there are
mountains of obsolete computer and electronics stuff to justify the theme, "Digital is Dead". And
several photojournalists have already made monographs of that very subject - hope they're using
film so they don't have to replace cameras every two years! We should just go out and compute the
net volume of the respective boneyards. All the unusable film cameras in the world probably wouldn't
add up to even a month's recycling intake of electronics in any significant city in this country.
 
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