I assume the 'retail monkey' in the case of Drew was used with a good dose of self-deprecation, given the fact that Drew has pointed out many times having spent his career working in an operational-level retail function himself.
I assume the 'retail monkey' in the case of Drew was used with a good dose of self-deprecation, given the fact that Drew has pointed out many times having spent his career working in an operational-level retail function himself.
This is laughable. You buy film in the amount you need. Stop. If you can't find your preferred film, you buy another one that is similar. No big deal, no big difference. There are an abundant offer of films nowadays.
For color?
Shoot digital and life it's good. Stop. You have to understand that you, large format shooter, represents the 0,0000001% of all potential film consumer in the world. Statistically not significant.
I completely can afford any 35mm film if I need. Problem solved.
What I wanna say? Is that you can buy and freeze films if you want, but can't extend your behaviour to the general film consumer nor refrain the general film shooter to complain about prices hikes.
The comparison is not apt. First of all large format shooters are way too scarce than people grilling their own meat in percentage.Alessandro - Shoot digital? That's a default, not an answer. And why would one want to be bound to consumer statistics. Billions of greasy fast food hamburgers get eaten in this country every year - that fact doesn't make them any better, and plenty of people still prefer to grill their own meat.
Well the same could be said for B&W ... why use film for B&W? Answer: it's called a hobby!
I really don't think the color film "resurgence" is due to 8"x10" or similar mormat requests.Kodak is not only doing all of the above in multiple kinds of color film, but is actually upgrading their capacity to make more. They wouldn't be doing that level of ongoing serious investment if there wasn't still a distinct market for it.
35mm film, 120 roll film, and sheet film are all different coating operations, and not just different sizes of the same thing. Kodak is not only doing all of the above in multiple kinds of color film, but is actually upgrading their capacity to make more. They wouldn't be doing that level of ongoing serious investment if there wasn't still a distinct market for it. You also need to think in terms of surface area of film. For example, every single sheet of 8x10 film exposed - a single click of the shutter - is equivalent in surface area to more than two 36 exposure rolls of 35mm film. Halve that for the more popular 4x5 format, which is selling rather briskly.
I certainly can't afford to be a "machine-gunner" in any kind of film format; but there are apparently a fair number of wealthy people who can afford to burn an awful lot of sheet film on a single trip or project. Otherwise, the inventories of such products wouldn't be selling out so rapidly like they are. Look at the bigger picture.
Sorry to be picky, but the area of 4x5 is 1/4 not half the area of 8x10 or half a roll of 35mm per 4x5 sheet based on 2 rolls for 8x10.
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