Nice one!
When the factories close because they couldn't wait for you to buy their "expired" film, don't get upset.
They just couldn't wait for you. They had mouths to feed as well.
Which part of "we're closing this line due to low demand" some didn't get, yet?
Does it cost more now? Tough, we are in a recession, everything is more expensive and not enough people are buying fresh film and using it regularly.
If 50% of the western world population bought a roll of film per week, Koda prices would fell.
you have said the same thing to me before too ...
if the stores are selling it as short date or expired film ( they have already purchased it )
they will buy more ...
are you suggesting the landfill is a good place for perfectly usable film to end up ?
unfortunately many of the landfills are getting FULL of things that shouldn't be thrown out anyways.
and i have gladly remove expired film or short date film from the waste stream, just as i will gladly
do my best to remove silver from the waste stream, and glass/plastic/wood to recycle, and donate clothing
kitchen goods home goods &c to goodwill/salvation army, church rummage sale, food to the food pantry and other things ...
i also buy used cars, and spent a number of years when i was younger re-purposing parts from a junk car to a road-worthy one,
just as i have a parts camera that i remove parts from to fix older cameras i have. what is the point of filling the landfill
with stuff tha can be re-used, recycled, repurposed restored &c ... ?
its like suggesting you can't eat leaftovers from last night's dinner because the grocery store, or farmer will go broke if you aren't cooking with fresh food every day.
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to speak to the second part of your post,
most of the world doesn't use a film camera anymore ...
and even if they did, kodak would not lower their prices.
they have been raising their prices 2x a year since before the 1980s. it does not fluxuate
like the stock + commodities markets. the cost of silver is at a 7 year low ( about $16.32 / troy oz ) ,
does it seem like prices of film or paper or even silver nitrate reflect that ?
kodak has consistently been removing films from their line - up since ... the 1880s.
at the moment, sadly it seems like they offer too much, maybe they will get rid of the stuff that doesn't sell
and concentrate on the things that do.