For some time, I have been working to come up with a SWAG (Scientific Wild A** Guess) as to the sale of domestic US Large format cameras. This is a market segment that is soooooo far below the radar screen of current interest, it isn't even a microscopic blip - except to those of us who love LF. No one is looking at this niche so if you want data - you need to come up with it yourself.
Interestingly, after looking at the average sales of LF cameras on eBay, and doing some interpolation of new camera sales based on old history, discussions with current sellers and some analysis of serial numbers and flat out gut-feel - I have come up with a SWAG.
Currently, I would estimate that the domestic US used camera sales of LF systems in the Domestic US market run in the neighborhood of 4000 units per year. New cameras probably run in the neighborhood of 1000 new systems per year. (As a side note, PMA fixes digital SLRs at 750,000/year!)
The average lenses per LF camera body seem to be in the neighborhood of 3 per in 4X5 and 2 per for 8X10. 5X7 is probably closer to the 8X10 average but seems to be a bit of an orphaned format by comparison to 8X10 and 4X5.
Systems larger than 8X10 get a lot of press but seem to represent a very small niche within a niche. I could not come up with sufficient data to even come up with a SWAG for this segment.
Informed opinion seems to be that there are in the neighborhood of 50,000 active shooters of LF systems in the US - increasingly composed of dedicated hobbiests and several handfuls of fine-art field photographers.
Interestingly, the data seems to indicates (pessimistically) a less-rapid drop or (optimistically) even a slight upward trend in the LF market - unlike the trends in 35mm an MF. The massive amount of professional LF gear being dumped on the market at bargain prices seems to be drawing people into the LF niche - even growing it, albeit to a very small degree as amateurs put otherwise idled pro gear into active use. This does not translate into an upward trend in film and/or paper as the rate of use for the hobby shooter is far less than that of the pros former "burn rate."
MF seems to be facing the bleakest future - formerly the refuge of wedding photographers, it is being abandoned in favor of digital production. High-end CCDs have made possible a digital image quality equal to that of MF - or at least close enough for the customer who loves the instant gratification offered by digital.
These are bald-faced SWAGs based upon snippets of market data and selective sampling of eBay statistics. If these data are correct, LF represents a unique line between the precipitous drop in 35mm and MF and a slower decline (perhaps even stable to slight growth.)
It suggests that, at least in the short term, the Digital revolution will top-out at the MF level for image quality. The demand for digital accutance greater than MF is missing at current prices and this will continue to work against the production of affordable CCD's approaching accutance achieved by LF. Admittedly, the drive to produce consumer-level CCDs more cheaply will probably make affordable LF digital backs a reality.
Your WAGS, SWAGS and comments are welcome. I've formed my opinions but am eager to be pursuaded differently. Please - no analog v digital tangents. I think we've been there done that, already.
Interestingly, after looking at the average sales of LF cameras on eBay, and doing some interpolation of new camera sales based on old history, discussions with current sellers and some analysis of serial numbers and flat out gut-feel - I have come up with a SWAG.
Currently, I would estimate that the domestic US used camera sales of LF systems in the Domestic US market run in the neighborhood of 4000 units per year. New cameras probably run in the neighborhood of 1000 new systems per year. (As a side note, PMA fixes digital SLRs at 750,000/year!)
The average lenses per LF camera body seem to be in the neighborhood of 3 per in 4X5 and 2 per for 8X10. 5X7 is probably closer to the 8X10 average but seems to be a bit of an orphaned format by comparison to 8X10 and 4X5.
Systems larger than 8X10 get a lot of press but seem to represent a very small niche within a niche. I could not come up with sufficient data to even come up with a SWAG for this segment.
Informed opinion seems to be that there are in the neighborhood of 50,000 active shooters of LF systems in the US - increasingly composed of dedicated hobbiests and several handfuls of fine-art field photographers.
Interestingly, the data seems to indicates (pessimistically) a less-rapid drop or (optimistically) even a slight upward trend in the LF market - unlike the trends in 35mm an MF. The massive amount of professional LF gear being dumped on the market at bargain prices seems to be drawing people into the LF niche - even growing it, albeit to a very small degree as amateurs put otherwise idled pro gear into active use. This does not translate into an upward trend in film and/or paper as the rate of use for the hobby shooter is far less than that of the pros former "burn rate."
MF seems to be facing the bleakest future - formerly the refuge of wedding photographers, it is being abandoned in favor of digital production. High-end CCDs have made possible a digital image quality equal to that of MF - or at least close enough for the customer who loves the instant gratification offered by digital.
These are bald-faced SWAGs based upon snippets of market data and selective sampling of eBay statistics. If these data are correct, LF represents a unique line between the precipitous drop in 35mm and MF and a slower decline (perhaps even stable to slight growth.)
It suggests that, at least in the short term, the Digital revolution will top-out at the MF level for image quality. The demand for digital accutance greater than MF is missing at current prices and this will continue to work against the production of affordable CCD's approaching accutance achieved by LF. Admittedly, the drive to produce consumer-level CCDs more cheaply will probably make affordable LF digital backs a reality.
Your WAGS, SWAGS and comments are welcome. I've formed my opinions but am eager to be pursuaded differently. Please - no analog v digital tangents. I think we've been there done that, already.

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