All the speculation is just a waste of time. I bet that in one year Tetenal will be here and running, and will have solved the current problems.
A trustee appears to have been appointed on October 16th, and this appeared to have been the very first action the court took after insolvency was declared on October 1st. The insolvency is still listed as §270a, which corresponds to "Eigenverwaltung", i.e. self administration. Whatever may happen to Tetenal in the near future, these recent developments are not a court mandated reversal of action or anything out of the ordinary, just a continuation of an ongoing case.This week the court has ordered a trustee to run the business of Tetenal, what to my understanding means the ending of the selfmanagement and the installation of the standard insolvency procedure to save the firm.
Same thoughts at me. In worst case production is still done at the next time for several month. Later you got it to several month from retailers. At last other companies will done it under licence but it may be (perhaps in one 1/2 years some special developers will end.A trustee appears to have been appointed on October 16th, and this appeared to have been the very first action the court took after insolvency was declared on October 1st. The insolvency is still listed as §270a, which corresponds to "Eigenverwaltung", i.e. self administration. Whatever may happen to Tetenal in the near future, these recent developments are not a court mandated reversal of action or anything out of the ordinary, just a continuation of an ongoing case.
A trustee appears to have been appointed on October 16th, and this appeared to have been the very first action the court took after insolvency was declared on October 1st. The insolvency is still listed as §270a, which corresponds to "Eigenverwaltung", i.e. self administration. Whatever may happen to Tetenal in the near future, these recent developments are not a court mandated reversal of action or anything out of the ordinary, just a continuation of an ongoing case.
My impression is, that this is just normal course of action during such proceedings. In fact, October 16th was the first time the court did anything at all in this case since the request for insolvency proceedings was filed on October 1st. I am not very familiar with German insolvency law myself (and not a lawyer to begin with), but applying my home country's legal procedures to these I would say that everything is on course. The portal I pull my info from claims it is updated multiple times a day, so I'd say it's §270a for now, which is a good thing for us.However that very trustee has explicite rights beyond that of the supervisor appointed in the case of self-management also his legal title is different from that supervisor.
(But I admit this is very complicated in details, moreover as some legal terms have different meaning than the same term in common life.)
Which includes buying Kodak and Ilford products manufactured by Tetenal.at this point there is not much we can do for Tetenal except buy their products like there was no tomorrow.
https://www.tetenal.com/en/corporate_history/Anybody know the WWII History of this company.....were their facilities pretty much bombed out during the war, or did they survive OK.?
I really had no idea who this company was, until i read this post. Wiki says they have been around since 1850.....is that true.?
I live in the usa.....i am not sure if we even have railroads that old.....Impressive.!
Thank You
Over here Tetenal for decades was the manufacturer most prominent within retail in the field of photo chemicals. In the early 80s they added photographic paper, bought-in/custom-made and branded with their own label.I really had no idea who this company was, until i read this post.
Anybody know the WWII History of this company.....were their facilities pretty much bombed out during the war, or did they survive OK.?
Sorry if i missed it, but does that link address WWII.?
I see.....Thank YouMany german manufacturers had been affected by the war
-) by restructuring for war production
-) by actual destruction by allied bombing (rarely shelling)
-) by dismantling by the Allies
-) by the political situation following the zoning
Tetenal mainly was into blending and packaging chemicals, thus do not expect a chemical plant with synthesis.
Anybody know the WWII History of this company.....were their facilities pretty much bombed out during the war, or did they survive OK.?
I really had no idea who this company was, until i read this post. Wiki says they have been around since 1850.....is that true.?
I live in the usa.....i am not sure if we even have railroads that old.....Impressive.!
Thank You
Tetenal mainly was into blending and packaging chemicals, thus do not expect a chemical plant with synthesis.
Sorry if i missed it, but does that link address WWII.?
My "panic buy" of German XTOL arrived today . The product is nicer than ever. Tetenal puts more sulfite in with the developing agent packet. I've noticed no more very tiny brown particles. The older packages, no matter how good your technique, there would always be (really milligram quantities ) of little brown particles, that would gather, like tea leaves, as the mixed solution cooled.Which includes buying Kodak and Ilford products manufactured by Tetenal.
Dow chemical made styrene monomer for napalm. That was 80 years ago. Everything was crazy.it is common for German companies to not dwell on WWII, most of the events many companies were involved with were not under their direction or Control.
US Hershey chocolate and Swiss Nestlé are in the business news. Saying we are so sorry we used slave labor. Not sure when it really stopped, just because slavery is illegal doesn't make it extinct.If a firm arose out of ruins, that was typically stated in the past, but that about was it.
However with the public discussion around forced labour that came up at the end of the 90s some firms meanwhile become selfreflective on their part in during WWII.
But this all is beyond the discussion of Tetenal being in trouble.
US Hershey chocolate and Swiss Nestlé are in the business news. Saying we are so sorry we used slave labor. Not sure when it really stopped, just because slavery is illegal doesn't make it extinct.
Later [Tetenal] even had a kind of magazine laying at the the photo store where they described the use of some products and news out of their range. A form of marketing unique in the photographic field in those years.
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