Sirius Glass
Subscriber
The one bargain is that we can still get many great color print, color slide and black & white film at reasonable prices. Another bargain is that we can now buy cameras that we could not even afford to dream about.
A few years ago, acros was inexpensive in "pro packs" for 120.
To me it seems like photo paper and my time are the main expenses of film photography. But I'm a slow shooter.
A few years ago I bought a Fuji X100 digital camera. Since then I have bought a nice FM2n, a great 120 folder, a couple lenses, film and paper. In several years I have not spent as much as the X100 cost. It's odd when people say that film photography is so much more expensive.... I guess that would be true if you use tons of film and have it processed by a lab.
Paper can add up fast if you print a lot....
Key word here is FRESH. At expiration this film goes bad fast. That said I like it and used it very successfully but only used because I got it for 75 cents USD a roll in Beijing. I'd never pay $3.50 or so for it when Ilford can be had for less than $1 more per roll.
It goes straight into he freezer when I get it, and I defrost on need. I believe some has gone past expiry, but if have had no issues. Newest batch in the mail to me is expiry 2017.
It's just weird. Hey, if it's good, it's good, if you like it, great. For my extra 5% a roll, I'll go with Ilford.

Film isn't THAT expensive, but it is no longer "the least expensive thing in photography" as people used to say.

You sure? Even with inflation taken into account? What did a roll of Tri-X cost in 1975, for example?
You sure? Even with inflation taken into account? What did a roll of Tri-X cost in 1975, for example?

No. I'm buying film to use, not to freeze.Have any of you used Shanghai GP3 past it's expiry date?
You apparently misunderstood. My impression is that, adjusted for inflation, film cost has remained similar or perhaps even decreased. My point though is that the bottom fell out of prices for film gear, making the equipment now the cheapest thing in photography per shot.
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No. I'm buying film to use, not to freeze.
When I look in an old Modern Photography (April 1976) I see Garden Camera in Seventh Avenue, New York offering Tri-X at $0.89 for 135/20, $1.19 for 135/36, and $0.85 for 120 roll. And a Nikon F2 Photomic with a 50mm f2 lens on it went for $469.00. I could easily afford the film but the camera was more than a month's salary!
Either do the free shipping options you mention, or bundle your film order in with other things. I throw in a some film every time I order heavy things like chemicals or paper from Freestyle.
The blue film base has been gone for quite a while. The color in the developer is only the AH dyes washing out.
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