DMJ
Member
Apparently they gave a bunch of them to influencers and youtubers and there is no information about price or where to get it.
Sorry. I can use the proper anatomical word if that would help.Oh great you wrote boobs. Now this is going to end up in the soapbox. Thanks a lot.
So are these plastic cameras going to end up in the trash or not?
Sorry. I can use the proper anatomical word if that would help.
One-use cameras are nothing new - there are bunch of them to buy from Kodak, Ilford, Fuji.View attachment 292108
Apparently, they gave a bunch of them to influencers and YouTubers and there is no information about price or where to get it.
All Kodak Black and White still films are sold through the Kodak Alaris professional film division, along with the Portra and Ektar colour still films.They probably call them Professional because only pros use BW.![]()
Absolutely, they will. Batteries and all if the lab doesn't care and doesn't have a recycling partner to send them to.
If these are "ordinary" single use cameras, one would need a darkroom or changing bag and patience to reload. You sure couldn't just pop in a new roll of film. As noted the film spools into an empty cassette.I haven't seen the new Kodak single use camera but from the photo posted, the body looks similar to the colour model.
IIRC the film is on the opposite side to the battery ( looking at the back of the camera the film is on the right and the battery on the left) and this should cut down on the likelihood of getting a shock from a fully charged capacitor.
I don't believe these cameras can be easily reloaded as you break open the film compartment (it is not hinged) and it won't reclose properly. I know Ilford had at one time a single-use and a reusable camera, two separate cameras.
Back in the late 1990s and early 2000s, single-use cameras were collected for "recycling" from labs. I think some of the "recycling" was more to stop empty single-use cameras being shipped to China to be reloaded and sealed with black tape( Fuji Ireland tried this). Other "recycling" was to collect cameras for shipping to China. I remember one independent film distributor offered, the lab, €0.05 per camera body collected
Kodak has always been about bringing photography to the ordinary person.
Do you mean that Kodak Alaris doesn't sell the Gold and Color Plus films? That film wasn't included in the bankruptcy settlement?All Kodak Black and White still films are sold through the Kodak Alaris professional film division, along with the Portra and Ektar colour still films.
The consumer film division handles the Gold and Color Plus films, which are often distributed through different distributors.
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