Kodachromeguy
Subscriber
Lee, I regret you are right. Color film will be prohibitive to make on a small scale. But I must say, in my case, I am comfortable using digital media when I want color. I especially appreciate the fact that a digital camera has little or no reciprocity effect. I often take pictures in old buildings or factories. I just set up the tripod, click the shutter, and let the sensor collect enough light, be it 30 seconds, 1 minute, or 10 minutes (I don't try to set the camera et ISO 250,000 or whatever some of the manufacturers claim; I leave it at its base ISO). Film was harder to predict in low light.The manufacture and processing of commercial color film is so complicated and expensive that it's a miracle we can still do it at all. Without a mass market, there's simply no way to support it.
Monochrome emulsions are much easier to make and will be around as long as the craft of photography is practiced, whether they be available on flexible film from small manufacturers or hand-coated on glass plates or paper. Digital imaging will spin off into an infinity of petapixels and terabytes, but chemical photography will endure.
But monochrome is where I really like the look of film. I am one of those grumpy old geezers described above. A hundred 5-packs of 120 Tri-X and miscellaneous packages of 135 film will serve the rest of my life. The films really don't take up too much space in the freezer. As I mentioned before on these forums, I am still shooting an occasional roll of 25-year-old Panatomic-X, and it seems fine after a quarter century. We will roll with the punches and let the breezes or time carry us along (with our Leicas, Rolleiflexes, and Hasselblads......).