OrWo ("Original Wolfen", East Germany, historically Agfa)
They are selling B/W Orwo film through a website in the USA. Are they still coating it, or is it from existing stock?
What would be really nice to know is if Alaris has any real legal leverage with EKCo. to insure continued production of film. My assumption has always been that without cinema color negative stock that Rochester would throw in the towel. Alaris has closed the factory they own in the UK so Alaris is out of the coating business shifting to a toll manufacturing agreement with Carestream . I see Alaris trying to shift away from film as soon as it struggles in anyway .Eastman Kodak is still manufacturing and selling significant volumes of motion picture film.
Kodak Alaris is still buying still film manufactured for them by Eastman Kodak, and marketing it.
Hi,
I post this on "Industry News" because i think it's the best category for this thread.
What i suggest with this thread is to have a "snapshot" of who is still making film in the world and who does not. This is an attempt to have a thread that tells us where film is still being made, internationally. Correct me if i'm wrong and please update this thread with corrections and news so this thread is kept alive.
Ilford (Harman->Pemberstone Ventures)
Everything fine at Ilford, they manufacture film, paper, chemistry, introduced new products in the last few years (Kentmere and "Ilford PAN" films)
Agfaphoto is just repackaged Fuji E6 and C41 film. As for the Black and White film Agfaphoto offers, I believe it's a custom made emulsion made in the Ilford factory.
Part of what you have said is true, but there's some muddle in there.I should point out that Ilford have not 'introduced 'Kentmere'. They bought that company out. Ilford are based in a place called Moberly and are on a vast site. Kentmere was a small business, located some 250 miles away in a small village and if you didn't know of them you would not have given it second thoughts as you drove through.
They have continued producing 'Kentmere' but I believe it is their version, not the original. Kentmere papers were at least twice as fast as Ilford multigrade,grade for grade were harder and were a colder tone.
The Kentmere fibre based papers have been discontinued completely, much to my dissapointment. Not only that, the resin coated papers made by Kentmere were significantly cheaper than the Ilford products, now under the control of Ilford they are about the same. (in UK anyway.)
I don't know definitely, and have no proof, but to me it seems it was a larger company just wanted to eliminate competition.
I should point out that Ilford have not 'introduced 'Kentmere'. They bought that company out. Ilford are based in a place called Moberly and are on a vast site. Kentmere was a small business, located some 250 miles away in a small village and if you didn't know of them you would not have given it second thoughts as you drove through.
They have continued producing 'Kentmere' but I believe it is their version, not the original. Kentmere papers were at least twice as fast as Ilford multigrade,grade for grade were harder and were a colder tone.
The Kentmere fibre based papers have been discontinued completely, much to my dissapointment. Not only that, the resin coated papers made by Kentmere were significantly cheaper than the Ilford products, now under the control of Ilford they are about the same. (in UK anyway.)
I don't know definitely, and have no proof, but to me it seems it was a larger company just wanted to eliminate competition.
Part of what you have said is true, but there's some muddle in there.
Harman Technology (Ilford photo) bought Kentmere based on representations that were made to them. That was in 2008 if I remember well.
When they went to inspect the factory a lot of bad things from a Health and Safety viewpoint were apparent. Besides the fact that some of the papers were coated using a formula that was only in someone's head.
If you remember well the old Kentmere factory in Cumbria didn't produce films.
Harman took what they could and tried to re-create the papers at their Mobberley factory.
They had no other option than to close down the Kentmere factory.
A year later (2009) they launched a new film branded as Kentmere initially in the US and then later in the UK and other European countries.
The branding of their lowest priced film as Kentmere was due to marketing reasons. There is nothing on that film that came from the old Kentmere film apart the name and logo.
This information comes courtesy of an interview with one of Harman's Directors taken last year and available on the Film Photography Podcast site.
Here: http://filmphotographyproject.com/podcast/2015/04/film-photography-podcast-episode-123-–-april-15-2015
A correction Ilford/Harman didn't close the the Kentmere factory it's still there the packaging part of the company expanded after selling off the photographic paper side.
Ian
Don't forget New55. They are coating and assembling 4x5 instant film (a re-formulation of Polaroid's Type55 positive/negative instant film) at their small factory in Ashland, Massachusetts.
They are also marketing a 4x5 black and white negative film, called Atomic X. They've said is it made for them in China, I would guess by Shanghai.
In Tianjin has a factory call "Sanhuan" is still coating glass plate and l can find some photographers who has plate camera using it. Lucky still coating B/W film call SHD 100 but it has terrible high light.
Correct, a quick look around on the publically available information on companieshouse.gov.uk confirms that Kentmere Packaging Ltd is a subsidiary of the old company Kentmere Ltd (formed 1906). There is no connection now with Ilford/Harman, the shares in Kentmere Ltd being currently held by several private individuals.
This seems to confirm that Harman simply purchased the assets of the photographic side of the company....maybe to rescue the knowledge and business rather than just to eliminate competition.
Yes there was Hindustan Photo Films, as far as I know they produced Xray Film, Bromide paper and processing chemicals,I seem to recall reading somewhere that there was a manufacturer in India (possible photo papers) ???
Kodak Alaris also has a manufacturing facility in Windsor Colorado, where Carestream is. I don't know whether that is actually a shared interest in the Carestream facility, or a separate one.
But are they actually coating film in their facilities? Or are they using a partner (like Inoviscoat for example)
There was a film called Svema made in Ukraine in the former Soviet Union. I acquired an unshot roll as part of a camera purchase. I still have the unshot roll. (I also have an unshot roll of Kodachrome.) Anyway, according to the Wikipedia article, they quit making film in 2000 and have sold out to a company called Astrum. I don't know if Astrum makes film, but probably not.
Updated info added in edit: Apparently Astrum might still be making film. There is someone on ebay selling it as fresh, with 2018 date. Of course, it might just be old stock.
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