Pieter12
Member
From that I conclude eating cake gives you the same satisfaction as film photography.When photography gets expensive, I will just have to eat cake rather than shoot digitally, except for remote sensing from a spacecraft.
From that I conclude eating cake gives you the same satisfaction as film photography.When photography gets expensive, I will just have to eat cake rather than shoot digitally, except for remote sensing from a spacecraft.
From that I conclude eating cake gives you the same satisfaction as film photography.
Working in a darkroom does not necessarily mean that you have taken the photograph. As an aside I would wager that 50% of this forum's members do not wet print their work.No, still a photographer. Your rewriting your definition changes nothing but wasting your energy.
Which means that 50% do.Working in a darkroom does not necessarily mean that you have taken the photograph. As an aside I would wager that 50% of this forum's members do not wet print their work.
I'd probably just continue making dry plates. If photography is about images then there's no contest that digital is significantly better imaging medium than film in every imaginable way. The developing process is half the fun.Sorry to hear you wouldn't be interested in photography without film. What would you do then? Photography is not about film, it is about the images.
What's your opinion on computational photography? Do you consider computational photography to be photography? The algorithms in your phone can make better images than anyone on this forum,Working in a darkroom does not necessarily mean that you have taken the photograph. As an aside I would wager that 50% of this forum's members do not wet print their work.
I knew it was only a matter of time before this discussion cultivated a new name to add to my ignore list.
They will still have their line of Kodak Branded AA and AAA Batteries, scarfs, hats, TEEShirts ... and 90 minute Cassette Tapes; but Polaroid gives them stiff competition in those departments. They also have a MINI HD Video Cube (POLAROID ) sells for like $5 at the register at my local Jobber.That would officially be the end for me and anything branded Kodak.
If Kodak raises its prices a significant amount, it will cause many people to stop buying Kodak film (these people will buy film from other manufacturers, which is currently less expensive).
If Kodak raises its prices a significant amount, it will cause many people to stop buying Kodak film (these people will buy film from other manufacturers, which is currently less expensive). Then it's not a matter of Kodak makes film that doesn't sell so lowers its price again, because Kodak has to make money.
I'm gonna disagree with you here. Tmax, Ektar and Portra are the best films on the market, hands down. Not that Hp5 or Fuji's products are bad, but Ektar and Portra are pretty much the standard every color film is compared against. I think people would eat the cost and still buy it, even and Polaroid prices.
I'm gonna disagree with you here. Tmax, Ektar and Portra are the best films on the market, hands down. Not that Hp5 or Fuji's products are bad, but Ektar and Portra are pretty much the standard every color film is compared against. I think people would eat the cost and still buy it, even and Polaroid prices.
How about you? How much extra per roll are you willing to pay for Tmax, Ektar, and Portra? Do you even shoot Tmax, Ektar, and Portra? I suspect different people have different film preferences and different levels of price sensitivity.I'm gonna disagree with you here. Tmax, Ektar and Portra are the best films on the market, hands down. Not that Hp5 or Fuji's products are bad, but Ektar and Portra are pretty much the standard every color film is compared against. I think people would eat the cost and still buy it, even and Polaroid prices.
Unfortunately in terms of predicting the effect on Kodak film sales isn't the fact that each of us, me included, is by and large giving our own opinion and assuming that if most or even enough of the rest of the film buying community think the same but we just don't knowThat’s just like, your own opinion, man .
Those are interesting questions; Not sure that they are easy to answer… but thought provoking. Back in the Polaroid days I loved both B&W and color sheet Polaroid, for both straight and alternative uses. I shot as much as I could afford and in hindsight that wasn’t enough. It was great product and some of my finest work is on Polaroid “film”. Portra is my current lust and I’m doing the same thing… probably not shooting enough. The cost of film is like the cost of gas (petrol) where it is easy to complain about price increases but equally easy to adapt and get over the shock. Then we reminisce about “the good old days”.How about you? How much extra per roll are you willing to pay for Tmax, Ektar, and Portra? Do you even shoot Tmax, Ektar, and Portra? I suspect different people have different film preferences and different levels of price sensitivity.
Unfortunately in terms of predicting the effect on Kodak film sales isn't the fact that each of us, me included, is by and large giving our own opinion and assuming that if most or even enough of the rest of the film buying community think the same but we just don't know
All we can say is that it is likely that there comes a point at which the recent frequency and size of increases is almost bound to adversely affect film sales to the detriment of revenue. Where that point is I don't know. The size of our participatory group is, I feel, far too small to really be significant in statistical terms
SinoPromise didn’t acquire that business, Eastman Kodak is the owner of the film production, I can't see that changing.That would officially be the end for me and anything branded Kodak.
That’s just like, your own opinion, man .
I shoot a lot more Ektar than Tmax or Portra, but yeah It's expensive and I have to be conservative with my frames. When it comes to daily snapshotting I'm not going to use anything other than Gold 200 or Orwo. If it's somewhere a bit more important or the conditions are a little more challenging I'll use Hp5 or Delta or XP2, but if it's something deeply important to me and I absolutely want to get the best result I will absolutely use Tmax/Portra/Ektar regardless of the cost. It's one of those "buy once/cry once" type things in my head.How about you? How much extra per roll are you willing to pay for Tmax, Ektar, and Portra? Do you even shoot Tmax, Ektar, and Portra? I suspect different people have different film preferences and different levels of price sensitivity.
I don't really understand this idea of shooting lower cost film when its not important. When is it not important? I guess it depends on how you approach photography, and how and what you shoot, and what you plan to do with the image after you shoot it. The concept of "daily snapshotting" is foreign to me. What exactly is that? If I were just posting pictures of my lunch on Instagram I might think about using a lower cost film. Actually, I would just shoot digital. I guess everybody is different.I shoot a lot more Ektar than Tmax or Portra, but yeah It's expensive and I have to be conservative with my frames. When it comes to daily snapshotting I'm not going to use anything other than Gold 200 or Orwo. If it's somewhere a bit more important or the conditions are a little more challenging I'll use Hp5 or Delta or XP2, but if it's something deeply important to me and I absolutely want to get the best result I will absolutely use Tmax/Portra/Ektar regardless of the cost. It's one of those "buy once/cry once" type things in my head.
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