toulcaz31
Member
I think they refer to the new Cinestill fundraising campaign. I am not sure we should call this a new film stock...What is the third one?
I think they refer to the new Cinestill fundraising campaign. I am not sure we should call this a new film stock...What is the third one?
Exciting to think we've had three new colour film options in the last month or so!
I would be very excited to see 120 TMY-2 coated/sold on ESTAR rather than acetate. While I found 120 Bergger Pancro 400 far too grainy and unsharp for my taste, its polyester base completely solved acetate's damnable bulging toward the lens in reverse-curl film holders. May Kodak make the transition ASAP!They no longer make their own acetate base, so it would not surprise me if they were intending to move to Estar for all 120.
Here is the B&H Photo listing for Gold 200: https://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/prod...1075597_professional_gold_200_120_5_pack.html
It's $49.95, so more expensive than Ektar at their current 'sale' price. But even if you look at the not marked down price Ektar is like $53 for a Pro Pack. I'm going to go ahead and call KA's attempt to launch an affordable 120 alternative to Portra and Ektar an embarrassing bust. Don't get me wrong, I like the film and I like more choices...but they should have just said that this is a new option for us, not a 25% less expensive option.
If they want to sell it to me direct I will sell it for 25% less than Ektar and Portra, but they don't!
Adox Colour Mission, Kodak Gold
What is the third one?
Exactly illustrating my frustrations with distributors. Just middle-men serving no purpose other than increasing the end cost to consumers.
Kodak is not a giant empire anymore. Taking on a direct sales business model would bury them in unnecessary overhead, not to mention endless complaints not even worth their time, and would also no doubt piss off the distributors they already have. Likewise, the era of big traditional camera stores is largely over, and many of those which remain no longer have the purchasing clout to buy anything direct, and now rely on wholesalers for all kinds of things. I was a purchasing agent or buyer for a large, well-funded sales corporation (non-photo related) for several decades, and know what it takes to maintain that kind of manufacturer-direct loyalty. The sales volume of even the highly successful camera store a few miles down the street wasn't even 1% of what we did per day. Sales Reps are only a loyal as the size of your last purchase order. Sad, but true.
None of this is about philanthropy. Manufacturers are in the game to make money. And so are sales reps. They can't live on what camera stores pay their employees, not even close. Ya gotta concentrate on the large volume customers, or you'll starve. That's just they way it's always been. Wholesale distributors exist for sake of everything in between. Does that mean higher end-user prices? Yep. I don't like it either. But that's also why I have a big freezer holding film bought in volume when it was priced right for my own needs.
Can You put it on a photo website like Flickr? Instagram really sucks for photosMore samples https://www.instagram.com/p/CbXcGzFL6rS it’s looking really nice!
This is possibly the latest from 2002. Kodak pro films cartons i have (portra / ektar) currently advise below 55f storage but ‘not essential’. No similar text on pro image.That linked to document must be a lot older than the date it was linked to, because with still film Kodak hasn't had special, professional use only colour film products for many years.
This stuff probably has a wholesale price 25% lower, nothing says that the big retailers will pass on this savings.Ok, but don't put out a press release that says this will be 25% less than Ektar and Portra when that's a promise you cannot keep. I'm not unrealistically asking for lower film prices, I don't actually think most film is too expensive generally. I'm just asking them to keep their promises.
Also, I'm not asking for direct to consumer sales. I'm asking for small photo labs to be able to create an account with Kodak and be able to order their products for resale. Nobody here can tell me that is too big of an ask, it's selling product...businesses large and small do it every day. I would love to throw away everyone's film after delivering scans but guess what, I have to ship it back to my customers. I have thousands of them across the country. I can think of 3 or 4 actual photo related business in the entire state of Maine that would like to buy direct from Kodak and re-sell. We're not talking about Amazon for film purchasing...we're talking about a few phone reps plus a warehouse and shipping team. If my wife and I can mange as much as 1000 rolls a week spread across hundreds of customers then KA can sell 3 photo stores in Maine some Gold 200 at whatever price Roberts Distributors is buying it for.
I have seen the PET extrusion video. Extraordinary. I put a link to it here somewhere.Well, Kodak itself in Rochester makes film, as well as certain industrial products like estar film base which they sell to other manufacturers. They apparently aren't themselves the marketing entity. Alaris is. But it wasn't all that long ago that private little camera stores did buy direct from that marketing branches of both Fuji and Kodak/Alaris. Locally, nowadays they simply don't seem to want to keep anyone on payroll bothering with it. Just buy it wholesale, and expect local customers to pay more for the convenience of picking it up in person locally, rather than the internet method. That business model seems to work for film at least; but it's sure backfired with darkroom papers. Lost my business anyway. I'll gladly pay a modest overcharge to help local businesses, but not an extra hundred bucks for a box of 16X20 paper.
I don't know if it's surfaced on this forum yet, but there has been a recent UTube tour of the Kodak plant circulating on certain other forums, with an entire hour so far dedicated just to the manufacture of film base. Other segments to follow. This could be an eye-opener for habitual complainers who act as if they could go out an make their own film cheaper in an old motorhome parked in the desert somewhere. The sheer scale of any coating operation mandates going big or forgetting it. The overhead and facilities costs must be staggering, not to mention currently gone wild petrochemical commodities pricing.
So the last thing they need is to juggle marketing monkeys too. Some of those facilities personnel are third-generation. Too bad the later CEO's got brought in with zero photographic background. But at least the demand for film is distinctly picking up.
I'm completely befuddled by the griping about Gold 120 pricing
I wonder if the potential savings comes from their transitioning to in-house produced Estar base from the acetate that they have been buying from 3rd parties?
Cheapest price I saw on the 5 pak is from Cinestill's website. They had it listed for $40, but increased it to $42 as of now.
Kodak Professional Gold 200 Color Negative Film, 120 5 Pack Medium Format, ISO 200 – CineStill Film
B&H reduced their price $5 to $45 now. Freestyle totally removed their pricing, after some bitching to them by consumers (I was one of them). They never responded back, so that was their response.
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