Aristophanes
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- Joined
- Mar 4, 2011
- Messages
- 513
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- 35mm
Like I said, go digging on the CIPA site. I did.
I don't think things went better for other makers than it did for Nikon:
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/12/technology/12nikon.html
PE - for once I've got to slightly disagree with you. As once a heavy 35mm film user, prior to converting
to large format, I personally stopped using Kodachrome once they spun off the development to Kodalux
and the processing got horrible. I heard the same story from other photographers, over and over. Then
when the silver bullet of 120 Kodachrome came along, the processing disappeared almost as fast. It's a
matter of reliablilty. Kodak repeatedly burned their own reputation among pros. They wiggle their little toe into the water and then pull it out if the temperature isn't just right. Typical of corporations that are
just too big to manage properly and treat their minor divisions like unwanted stepchildren. I had friends
who were put out of businesses a lab owners because they signed onto extremely expensive service
contracts for scanners etc, then found out that just when they needed the service, Kodak had pulled
out and left them high and dry. But even for a small fry like me back then, spending a week in the wilderness and then seeing a big scratch all across your roll of Kodachrome didn't inspire confidence.
Ummm, Drew, did you forget the Consent Decree by the US government?
With that decree, Kodak could no longer sell Kodachrome with processing included, and they were forced to sell processing chemicals to others. So, what happened? Customers went for the cheaper processing and got the associated quality. It took a few years, but that is what happened. Same thing for E6 and C41 processing, but there the results were resoundingly better due to the simplicity of the processes.
So, again, you have outside parties and the government which caused the decline in Kodachrome processing quality.
PE
Thanks for that tidbit of relevant information. But merely not allowing Kodak not to sell preprocessing with Kodachrome film would not seem to be a reason for not processing it at all, and spinning it off to someone else. As far as Velvia knocking them off the block or off the lightbox, that was well after the
Kodalux fiasco. E6-films at the time were hardly up to par, though the processing simplification was of
course desirable for independent labs. Velvia was difficult to print and difficult to scan from (still is in
some ways), so that explanation falls a bit short. Kinda like all the theories of why the mammoths and
mastodons started dying off around the end of the ice age - might have been the cumulative effect of
several different factors. I'd still be using Kodachrome if it was around. Looked at some 5x7 Kodachromes
last year and must say, even back then it had a look that would make E6 films today envious. Now I'm
banking on Ektar (and my freezer, just in case).
Kodak on NBC news tonight.http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44888892
The ink supply termination is a sign that someone is not getting paid. The means some sort of restructuring, likely overseen by the court, is imminent.
Ummm, Drew, did you forget the Consent Decree by the US government? With that decree, Kodak could no longer sell Kodachrome with processing included, and they were forced to sell processing chemicals to others.
PE
But that only applied to the USA market. Elsewhere, Kodachrome was normaly sold with Processing included, and most independent labs just reshipped it to the local Kodak Lab. In the 1970's Kodak had a pick up service at many Canadian Photo stores just to allow free drop off and pick up of Kodachrome.
After Kodak spun off their labs as Qualex, the quality faded. Even for C-41, I used to send a lot to Charles Abel in Toronto, and the quality went west when Qualex took over (Abel retired and the family sold the lab)
I think the use of film sales in 2000 is way off the mark if you are trying to make a statement about the decline of the use of film. People are still buying and using film as they can afford. Lets face it, people are all worse off in the wallet then they were in 2000. You are also a little off in your thinking that everything in public companies is out on the table. There is a big issue of illegal trade practices and trade manipulation that is at play at all times. There is a great deal of money to be made from people thinking a company is going under. Companies like Kodak can win from folding in a sense. If the prices of stocks slide at a regular rate, traders that projected that slide can make a win-fall if they get the numbers right. Also if they have stock prices that have fallen to a place where it would be good for another large photo company to step in an make a buy of the company then it is a win-fall as well. Names are worth a great deal of money, since there are memories that are often tied to names.
People that love one product and use one product will be drawn to purchasing more of that product if they think it will no longer be around (think polaroid) then when the dust settles and there just happens to be a product being offered from another company that works with the accessories of the dead product and looks a lot like the dead product then there is a surge to buy it up while using the fear that it will be gone (think fuji instant film). So there is money to be made.
Film companies have come and gone, camera companies as well. Digital did not kill film, it just changed it from being the everyday vehicle for the industry. You must be aware of the large number of people that are turning away from digital and moving backwards to see what was once done. You can see the use of wet plate in main stream magazine articles and the use of pop printing in mainstream as well. So there is not much to fear about.
When technology got into the automotive market people did not throw away their old cars for fear of getting parts for them. They knew that if they used it like many others did, then someone somewhere would make the parts. So lets not get all bent thinking that we will have to sell our film gear and all go get canon 5d set ups.
Hell with all the kids using Lomo cameras there is a ton of film being sold right there. Yes we may lose a company or two, but we will still have our film and still be able to shoot what we want when we want. We may have to work harder to find some stuff, but you know what it may be good to actually have to try to find something that is not simply two clicks away on the web.
Lets not be snobs over what you shoot and how you shoot it, drop the BS view about what camera you use makes you a better photographer. Thats utter crap. The picture is all in the shooters eye and hands and a ton is left to luck and natures hand in it all. Toy cameras shoot film, and so does every other size and shape of camera. New films come along all the time, and kodachrome was left rotting in the store rooms. It needed to be dropped because it was dead. You dont keep bad milk in your fridge for ten years with the hopes it might get used some day. So why do you think kodak should have done that?
Kodak is not blameless.
But in the photofinishing argument, customers wanted local labs and low low prices. That is why you had the development of the minilabs too.
PE
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