Ten301
Member
While I applaud Adox for branching out and wanting to fund color film research, I’m sorry, their tale on how this ‘new’ film came to be I just don’t buy.
If we are to believe Adox, it would have had to have been years ago that they were fairly far along in creating a viable, modern C41 compatible color negative film. They state on their site that after the first run, their coating partner went bankrupt. Who could that have been? Matching that description were only Agfa Leverkusen and the original Ferrania capable of coating color emulsions (I don’t think we’re talking Konica here) but, in and event, all ceased years ago. So, small Adox expects us to believe they attempted to produce a color film in a severely declining demand market, and were so tech savvy that they were so close to pulling it off? Look at the examples on their site; they look very good. Yet, InovisCoat still can’t do it? If they had it down back then, then why do they need all the funding for research to produce a color film now? I believe it’s far more likely that the film in those Adox Color Mission cans is a found master roll from Agfa Leverkusen or Ferrania, probably original Agfa Vista or Ferrania Solaris.
I’m sorry, I know I’m off on a bit of a rant. But just as with the earlier thread concerning Silberra’s films, it seems manufacturers/confectioners are becoming increasingly loose with the facts. I am certainly not accusing Adox, but their facts don’t add up. When you start telling fairytales to create excitement and separate consumers from their money, for whatever the purpose, it crosses the line.
If we are to believe Adox, it would have had to have been years ago that they were fairly far along in creating a viable, modern C41 compatible color negative film. They state on their site that after the first run, their coating partner went bankrupt. Who could that have been? Matching that description were only Agfa Leverkusen and the original Ferrania capable of coating color emulsions (I don’t think we’re talking Konica here) but, in and event, all ceased years ago. So, small Adox expects us to believe they attempted to produce a color film in a severely declining demand market, and were so tech savvy that they were so close to pulling it off? Look at the examples on their site; they look very good. Yet, InovisCoat still can’t do it? If they had it down back then, then why do they need all the funding for research to produce a color film now? I believe it’s far more likely that the film in those Adox Color Mission cans is a found master roll from Agfa Leverkusen or Ferrania, probably original Agfa Vista or Ferrania Solaris.
I’m sorry, I know I’m off on a bit of a rant. But just as with the earlier thread concerning Silberra’s films, it seems manufacturers/confectioners are becoming increasingly loose with the facts. I am certainly not accusing Adox, but their facts don’t add up. When you start telling fairytales to create excitement and separate consumers from their money, for whatever the purpose, it crosses the line.
