Paul Verizzo
Member
I recently posted the question, "If you could shoot only one color film, what would it be?"
One forum member, can't remember who, brought up his disappointment in the matters of cost. He historically relied on Walmart, Kodak Gold, Walmart processing. As most of us know, that's history. Especially local minilabs.
I did suggest that he shop around, and then I did likewise. And I was flabbergasted. Looking at C-41, the best deal I found was for Fuji 200, 36 exposure, for about $8-9/roll if you include shipping. I looked at Freestyle, Amazon, Film Photography Project, Photo Warehouse, B&H, and Adorama. Across the board, most of the merchants are out of stock on the value films. Some to be soon restocked, others unknown.
On top of the film cost, there's the matter of processing, if you don't do it yourself. OK, even if you do it yourself, there is at least a couple of dollars a roll cost. No more minilabs, no more daily pick up/drop off at various merchants, drug stores, grocery stores. Gone for at least eight years, generally. I did a thread on this in 2014 looking at my local options in Sarasota, Florida. So now you have to mail your cassettes....how?....no more cloth bags....and pray that they get there. If you live in a "big city," you will probably find a lab, but then there's the drive time to deliver and pickup. It appears to me that a simple development with perhaps low quality scanning will run about $10. So we are looking at a minimum of about $20/roll with no prints! High quality scans, add $5. And then you still need to print them yourself if that is your end game. (Although what with the internet and sharing prints are going the way of the dodo bird for most people.)
I'm going to think that most of us on this forum are not interested in 4x6 color prints. But if you are, add 35 cents per? Another $13. All told, call it $33 for what we used to get for, what, $10? Not counting inflation, of course.
And this isn't even addressing the cost of E6 slide films which are a lot more!
I'm fortunate that I have towards three dozen cassettes of C-41. Some Ektar, a lot of Kodak HD400, the consumer "High Definition" film that should have been pro. Kept frozen and in a lead bag. And I do my own C-41 processing which I then can scan. And an inkjet print.
If I ultimately deplete my color films I will reserve color for something very special. Like 120 format E6. Love them images! Otherwise, I will not be able to afford color.
One forum member, can't remember who, brought up his disappointment in the matters of cost. He historically relied on Walmart, Kodak Gold, Walmart processing. As most of us know, that's history. Especially local minilabs.
I did suggest that he shop around, and then I did likewise. And I was flabbergasted. Looking at C-41, the best deal I found was for Fuji 200, 36 exposure, for about $8-9/roll if you include shipping. I looked at Freestyle, Amazon, Film Photography Project, Photo Warehouse, B&H, and Adorama. Across the board, most of the merchants are out of stock on the value films. Some to be soon restocked, others unknown.
On top of the film cost, there's the matter of processing, if you don't do it yourself. OK, even if you do it yourself, there is at least a couple of dollars a roll cost. No more minilabs, no more daily pick up/drop off at various merchants, drug stores, grocery stores. Gone for at least eight years, generally. I did a thread on this in 2014 looking at my local options in Sarasota, Florida. So now you have to mail your cassettes....how?....no more cloth bags....and pray that they get there. If you live in a "big city," you will probably find a lab, but then there's the drive time to deliver and pickup. It appears to me that a simple development with perhaps low quality scanning will run about $10. So we are looking at a minimum of about $20/roll with no prints! High quality scans, add $5. And then you still need to print them yourself if that is your end game. (Although what with the internet and sharing prints are going the way of the dodo bird for most people.)
I'm going to think that most of us on this forum are not interested in 4x6 color prints. But if you are, add 35 cents per? Another $13. All told, call it $33 for what we used to get for, what, $10? Not counting inflation, of course.
And this isn't even addressing the cost of E6 slide films which are a lot more!
I'm fortunate that I have towards three dozen cassettes of C-41. Some Ektar, a lot of Kodak HD400, the consumer "High Definition" film that should have been pro. Kept frozen and in a lead bag. And I do my own C-41 processing which I then can scan. And an inkjet print.
If I ultimately deplete my color films I will reserve color for something very special. Like 120 format E6. Love them images! Otherwise, I will not be able to afford color.
