chuckroast
Subscriber
I have always been a little puzzled as to why super good, super popular products disappear and never seem to reappear. Yeah, sure, they might come back into production by name only and are not the same quality as the original. Or the brand name has been purchased and now the company is trying to pass of junk relying on the "brand name" to sell it. It sure seems that if Oriental Seagull was that good of a paper, and it was that good, then why isn't some manufacture picking up on it? Same for older Agfa, Kodak and Forte papers. If folks are willing to pay top dollar for some films then I'm sure they would do the same for a paper with a great Dmax and heavy silver content.
The problem that enlarging papers suffer, compared to the B&W films produced today, is that folks can used B&W film to produce Inkjet or digital prints. That means there is more of a market for B&W film than there is for a really top notch B&W printing paper. Or any printing paper for that matter. The lower amount of replies to this thread itself bares this out. The only solution to this problem is for all of us here to break our darkroom equipment out of storage and get going on some "REAL" printing. I'm not going to hold my breath!
Because the manufacturing facilities are often old and not cost effective to fix up
