arigram
Member
I have been in an ethical and economical dilemma for a little bit now and want to know where you stand.
There is a single store in my hometown that sells film stuff.
I buy my Ilford paper and chemicals from her and often other equipment as well. The owner of the store passed away recently due to cancer and left it to his wife. His widow and he was very friendly and extremely accommodating when I got almost all my present equipment, including most of my Hasselblad and studio kit through them. Sometimes I will order something from abroad that isn't sold in Greece, but my dilemma concerns buying something the local store offers, but I can find online a lot cheaper.
I had no second thoughts about ordering a thousand euros worth of PanF+ 120 as its not sold in Greece, but I need now to restock my most common FP4+ and HP5+, which go here for almost double the price.
I want to support the local store, but at the same time, since I never get less than a few 10-film bricks, have to also think of my pockets, which are hardly deep.
I guess I will continue buying paper and chems and maybe a few rolls on an emergency, but with large orders, my hands are tied.
You have the usual problem then:
No stock and high prices, no customers.
Yet, local photo store owners can't compete in this problematic market.
Support them, so one can still have a film market close by, but at what cost?
When does it stop being good business practice and becomes a charity?
What do you think?
There is a single store in my hometown that sells film stuff.
I buy my Ilford paper and chemicals from her and often other equipment as well. The owner of the store passed away recently due to cancer and left it to his wife. His widow and he was very friendly and extremely accommodating when I got almost all my present equipment, including most of my Hasselblad and studio kit through them. Sometimes I will order something from abroad that isn't sold in Greece, but my dilemma concerns buying something the local store offers, but I can find online a lot cheaper.
I had no second thoughts about ordering a thousand euros worth of PanF+ 120 as its not sold in Greece, but I need now to restock my most common FP4+ and HP5+, which go here for almost double the price.
I want to support the local store, but at the same time, since I never get less than a few 10-film bricks, have to also think of my pockets, which are hardly deep.
I guess I will continue buying paper and chems and maybe a few rolls on an emergency, but with large orders, my hands are tied.
You have the usual problem then:
No stock and high prices, no customers.
Yet, local photo store owners can't compete in this problematic market.
Support them, so one can still have a film market close by, but at what cost?
When does it stop being good business practice and becomes a charity?
What do you think?