No, it's coated by Fuji (in the Netherlands & other locations), but Tetenal is one of several suppliers/ distributors of it.Are you saying that tetenal is the company that is making fuji Crystal Archive?
This stuff is supposed to be the next best thing to cibachrome as far as fade resistance goes.
As far as Fuji goes, im assuming they still produce E6 chemicals?
Little surprise, if Tetenal was unable to supply them with RA-4 paper for that long ... well, let's hope for the best!A subsidiary of them, Tetenal Imaging, a printing service directed at commercial clients, has applied for insolvency too.
So who makes the paper branded under the label of Tetenal Vario RC paper? ThanksTetenal does NOT manufacture papers. They never did, though they rebranded papers.
Article on Petapixel from December concerning Tetenal situation with a link to a podcast interview with editor of Photo Klassik who has been invited into some workshops at Tetenal to help thier business plan. Some interesting bits even if the interviewer some how manages to fit Kodachrome into the interview, (just what a struggling business needs). Interestingly suggests they also make the ECN-2 process chemistry for EK as well as B&W.
https://petapixel.com/2018/12/06/te...largest-photo-chemical-firms-needs-your-help/
They cant go under if the produce ECN-2, Lots of motion picture film is still being used.
do you know how many new movies still are spread as film copies and then in what numbers? .
I know what ECN2 stands for for.
But the number of movies taken on film is a tiny fraction of all new movies copies distributed world wild (digitally meanwhile).
And the number of these movies is known too. The latest number I got at hand is 26/year. ?
And I will agree that the loss of Film in distribution does significantly reduce volumes, even if the print film costs much less per foot than camera film. Given the same 120 minute film opening on 200 screens, would use 720 6000 foot rolls of Print film. (plus a few dozen rolls of intermediate films, and sound recording film.)
Then please give me the number of new movie film prints being made. They no longer show up in any statistic. No wonder with nearly 100% cinema digitisation.
Who uses intermediate film and sound film in new movie production??
I suppose there are still a significant number of "art houses" that project film, but I wouldn't think it amounts to one percent.
Who uses intermediate film and sound film in new movie production??
Agfa cancelled all these films within the last years.
So did Fuji.
Yes, analog cinema is a very small market now, but Kodak is still betting on it, with Ektachrome and the (now vaporware) Super-8 camera. When I read the first press-releases, it was clear their intent is to form a new generation of filmmakers that want to use film.
They need someone to make the chemistry to process that film, right?
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