Awesome!Just shot a roll of SP2 and took it to my usual custom lab in Santa Fe for processing. They told me they don't do C41 and suggested I take it to the mini-lab (!) down town. Took them 10 minutes and charged me $6.50. This is a great way to process 35mm B&W.
Spoiler Alert for Canadian Photographers using BW film.
A brand new Hostert Dip and Dunk process machine is going to start up in Toronto to process BW Film
I will post more details as they come but all indications that this will be a great process line to Mail in your film.
I see the upsurge in the BW film directly happening at the Camera Store level where they sell, process and scan and this IMO is where the game is. Try all I want , I cannot interest this market to spend more money for one shot PMK or specialty Jobo process, and I am not interested with the roller transport crowd.
Where I am seeing huge upsurge is in Alternative Hybrid Methods where the ultimate print quality is important to the photographer, and is the area I teach and work.
I must say though I am glad this trend is happening and over time those using the services of others will maybe drift my way to make prints.
Adox did not had new machines made, but got just those written off.
No one imagines film photography to ever become a high volume consumer product again.
Do you remenber what the guys with the always negative outlook for film future here at apug / photrio had said about ten years ago? Instant film will be the first film type completely killed by digital............
Do you remenber what the guys with the always negative outlook for film future here at apug / photrio had said about ten years ago? Instant film will be the first film type completely killed by digital............
They said pack film would be the first to go, and they were 100% correct.
Completely wrong. They did not made any differentiation. They talked about instant film in general, and that means especially integral instant film as the dominant instant film type.
And the final word on packfilm is not spoken yet: Florian Kaps, who was successful with the Impossible Project, is now working on new packfilm production. And with the New55 boss on board he already has one in his team with quite a lot of experience in new packfilm production:
http://savepackfilm.supersense.com/
????But you forgot to say that those people were in best company as they were with the heads of for instance Impossible who back then gave instant film no chance at all.
Instax film is shot by toy cameras. No one was talking about that. Pack film is serious film, shot by LF.
????
Sorry, nonesense. Impossible Project organised several factory visits at the factory in Enschede in the last years for their customers (like me). I used the chance and joined one of these extremely interesting events and talked to the factory staff. In the half year before closing the Enschede factory they made 30 million film packs there! Those who didn't believe in the future of this medium have been the new owners of Polaroid at that time..
Can you say what Instax will do for the long term future of Kodak, Ilford, Foma Adox etc whose market is what I'd term the traditional film market. I fear that the example of Instax is not a lot of comfort for the above manufacturers or those of us who use their products. Thanks
pentaxuser
Can you say what Instax will do for the long term future of Kodak, Ilford, Foma Adox etc whose market is what I'd term the traditional film market. I fear that the example of Instax is not a lot of comfort for the above manufacturers or those of us who use their products. Thanks
pentaxuser
You and all these others have been fooled by these people telling you stories about them having been devoted to saving Polaroid film, they were not. You should not believe everything you are told.
Believe in those fairytales and be happy with them.
Thank you for your detailed reply to my question. You have given a few examples of shops in which Instax sales have resulted in an expansion of business and have mentioned that Instax has resulted in extra business for Fuji and Inoviscoat. I do not dispute your evidence but remain concerned that this provides enough evidence of a traditional film revival to justify as yet even cautious optimism.
I think the bigger concern for the likes if Ilford is reflected here at Photrio in the last few years, namely that all newcomers are "hybriders". They buy film and scan it. If they produce prints it is done digitally. Ilford in the form of Simon Galley before he sold his share in Ilford hinted quite strongly that Ilford's worry was about its need to sell silver gelatin paper in sufficient quantities to sustain the business and it looks to me, using Photrio as an example of the market, as if this need is not being met
pentaxuser
I'm not sure that the "large percentage" part of this statement is correct.A large portion of shoot n scanners move on to printing.
I'm one of them.
You may be one of them but where's the evidence that a large portion of other hybriders are doing what you do?. This may sound confrontational and it is not meant to be but is your evidence anecdotal i.e. others you know have said the same thing about others they know or you personally know of say 10-20 who have made the transition?A large portion of shoot n scanners move on to printing.
I'm one of them.
So...Instant Film is the gateway drug to film.Instant film in general (both Instax and Polaroid Originals) has positive side effects on what you call 'traditional film market' = non-instant films. Because instant film was the medium which already many years ago started a film revival and new interest in film as a photographic medium (not only Instax is booming, but Polaroid has also two-digit growth rates p.a.). Lots of young photographers, mainly 'digital natives', get in contact with this new for them medium film by instant film photography.
And a certain percentage of them, those with a deeper "love affair" with photography, discover the medium further and also try conventional film.
Lots of the numerous instant film shops worldwide have meanwhile added non-instant film products including standard film cameras in their programme. Just two examples:
"Film never die" shop in Melbourne started some years ago as an instant film shop. And now they are also a very successful, quickly growing film lab, film seller and workshop organiser. Most of their business is now from standard film.
Another current example is Brooklyn Film Camera In NY, a mainly instant film camera shop now extending its programme to standard film and cameras, too.
A big electronic shop chain where I am currently living has added instax film and cameras some time ago to their digital camera programme. And in the last months they have further added Fujifilm single use cameras next to Instax. A product I've never seen at their shops before.
So, instant film plays an important role as a starting point to get young photographers interested in using film. In the end, all film manufacturers and film distributors are benefitting from that in the mid and long term.
From a production point of view: The huge demand for instant film is very important to keep the coating lines at InovisCoat and Fujifilm running. At my factory tour at the Polaroid factory in Enschede it was clearly said and of course obvious and seeable for everyone that there is no emulsion making and coating at this plant. Integral instant film has a negative film base. And that is made by InovisCoat in Germany (former Agfa engineers and machinery). The Jumbo rolls are then shipped to Enschede. That keeps the line in Germany running at an economic reasonable capacity. And therefore it is possible that InovisCoat can coat some niche products for other companies, too. For example Bergger Pancro 400 and Lomography Tourqois films.
Similar at Fujifilm: The even much much bigger instant film production at their film plant in Tokyo keeps the coaling there running at high capacity and so supporting the production of their standard films.
Without the boom in instant film photography the situation for non-instant film would certainly significantly worse. Therefore even if you don't have any interest in using instant film, you should be happy that it is there.
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