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Who's makin' film for your old lady??

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tjaded

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Hi all--
I'm doing a little "research" project for a business proposal...maybe you can help. I'm trying to make a list of companies that are making film & what type of film they produce. Something like this:

Kodak: Color Pos./Color Neg./B&W Neg. various sizes
Fuji: Color Pos./Color Neg./B&W Neg. various sizes
Ilford: B&W Neg. various sizes
Maco: B&W Neg. various sizes
Rollei: B&W Neg. various sizes
Efke: B&W Neg. various sizes

Additions would be great, as long as they are available here in the U.S. I really appreciate any help you can offer (especially with companies offering color!)

Thanks,
Matt
 
Who's makin' film
for your old lady
While you been
out makin' film?
 
Ferrania?

I'm pretty sure that they still are cranking out house branded c-41 products.
 
Foma. No colour to my knowledge, but they make B&W negative and positive film.
 
Agfa/Gevart in Belgium makes some color negative film that is marketed by Roelli/Maco. Roelli Scanfilm
Ferrania still makes (to my knowledge) some color negative film, in 35mm.
Lucky in China makes color negative film, and b/w negative film.
Era in China makes some film.
 
Shanghai in China make 120 B & W rollfilm & sheet film available on the US ebay site.

Ferrania's colour films are made in 110 & APS as well as 35mm. They only recently stopped making it in 126 cartridges (the last manufacturer to do so)

Era's films are black & white neg (35mm & sheet film) - again available on ebay
 
Ferrania. I assume they still make film.

Ferrania is sold as house films and under Solris. I have seen 100, 200, and 400 in 35mm, other, as already posted, have seen 110 and APS, but the only 110 and APS that I have noticed here in the Phoenix Market is Fuji and Kodak.
 
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Ferrania is sold as house films and under Solris.

Uh, your spelling is incorrect. Ferrania uses the name SOLARIS for its C-41 negative films.
 
Maco and Rollei are not film manufacturers, AFAIK, they package, label and sell film manufactured by others
 
Ferrania film

Uh, your spelling is incorrect. Ferrania uses the name SOLARIS for its C-41 negative films.

Just a historical note: Ferrania is--AFAIK--a wholly-owned subsidiary of the 3M Corporation, or at least it was when I worked for them in the 1980s. I worked in their photofinishing division, 3M Photo, and we were buying both paper and film from the parent company.

We did a lot of private label film, and if memory serves, the film I remember seeing come into the plant gradually shifted from Italian to U.S. manufacture between 1980 and 1984. Don't take this as gospel, as I wasn't intimately involved with that end of things.

I remember asking if any of Ferrania's B&W products were available, and I was told that they weren't being imported, as the market was pretty much in the hands of Kodak, Ilford & AGFA.
 
Just a historical note: Ferrania is--AFAIK--a wholly-owned subsidiary of the 3M Corporation, or at least it was when I worked for them in the 1980s. I worked in their photofinishing division, 3M Photo, and we were buying both paper and film from the parent company.

We did a lot of private label film, and if memory serves, the film I remember seeing come into the plant gradually shifted from Italian to U.S. manufacture between 1980 and 1984. Don't take this as gospel, as I wasn't intimately involved with that end of things.

I remember asking if any of Ferrania's B&W products were available, and I was told that they weren't being imported, as the market was pretty much in the hands of Kodak, Ilford & AGFA.


Actually, according to this page they were spun off as part of Imation, and then Ferrania itself was sold again in 1999: "Ferrania Technologies is acquired by Schroder Ventures - Europe (now Permira). The company is launched as an independent company."
 
Ilford Imaging manufactures 2 colour films available in the USA.
 
These are the `Ilfochrome Micrographics´films `M´and `P´(different gammas).
They are direct-positive dye-bleach films, of course slow, with a a void in the spectral sensitivity and very expensive. They should be available in different sizes (incl. DP 35mm) in the USA via Calumet.

I assume they are produced as their `papers´ in the Ilford Imaging plant in Marly (CH).
 
These are the `Ilfochrome Micrographics´films `M´and `P´(different gammas).
They are direct-positive dye-bleach films, of course slow, with a a void in the spectral sensitivity and very expensive. They should be available in different sizes (incl. DP 35mm) in the USA via Calumet.

I assume they are produced as their `papers´ in the Ilford Imaging plant in Marly (CH).

These are films for "your old lady"?
 
These are films for "your old lady"?

Give AgX credit he's German and so very precise :D

My Old lady, if she hears you calling her that she'd kill you . . . uses Fuji colour film because she's been shown the errors of using Kodak . . . .

I've preferrred Fuji for colour going back to the E4 films, Fuji colour has always been far more accurate.

Ian
 
Paul,
I once watched a film devoted to old ladies handling arsenic. Thus I thought that very lady could handle such films...

(By the way, that movie was the last one using the whole stage Technicolor process.)
 
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Paul,
I once watched a film devoted to old ladies handling arsenic. Thus I thought that very lady could handle such films...

(By the way, that movie was the last one using the whole stage Technicolor process.)

My wife is a Royaltiy Mystery Writer, I dont want to give any more ideas.
 
Good morning, Ian Grant;

Thank you for providing a proper recognition for AgX. Yes, there are people out here who still appreciate technical precision.

Enjoy;

Ralph Javins

When they ask you how many megapixels you have in your camera, just tell them; "I use activated silver-bromide crystals for my storage medium."
 
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