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#1
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Another tiny nail ...
I shot some 120 C-41 last night (and a s- load of digital).
I told my buddy where to drop it off for me with the instructions, a store with a really good lab about 20 minutes away. He dropped them off this am. The store left me a message, so I called them... Turnaround : 1 week. They don't do 120 anymore (E-6 or C-41). 35mm only. They don't do E-6 anymore for any format (not enough turnover to manage the chems properly). -- gmail originated posts are filtered due to spam. |
#2
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Another tiny nail ...
Alan Browne wrote:
I shot some 120 C-41 last night (and a s- load of digital). I told my buddy where to drop it off for me with the instructions, a store with a really good lab about 20 minutes away. He dropped them off this am. The store left me a message, so I called them... Turnaround : 1 week. They don't do 120 anymore (E-6 or C-41). 35mm only. They don't do E-6 anymore for any format (not enough turnover to manage the chems properly). If you can't find Super Barricato di Bolgheri wine in your local shop, do you assume that's disappearing from the planet as well? |
#3
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Another tiny nail ...
"Rol_Lei Nut" wrote in message ... Alan Browne wrote: I shot some 120 C-41 last night (and a s- load of digital). I told my buddy where to drop it off for me with the instructions, a store with a really good lab about 20 minutes away. He dropped them off this am. The store left me a message, so I called them... Turnaround : 1 week. They don't do 120 anymore (E-6 or C-41). 35mm only. They don't do E-6 anymore for any format (not enough turnover to manage the chems properly). If you can't find Super Barricato di Bolgheri wine in your local shop, do you assume that's disappearing from the planet as well? If you can't find it, then the answer is yes. |
#4
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Another tiny nail ...
Bruce wrote:
Film isn't dead, but its position as a mass market medium for photography is coming to an end. Emerging economies are going directly to digital, so film is rapidly becoming a niche market in the developed world (no pun intended). Israel is like that. When I moved here in 1996 I sold all of my cameras because the taxes on a camera were 140% (yes one and half times the value) with new immigrant families allowed one tax free. This was before eBay and I "took a bath" on them. :-( At that rate no one really had any cameras except pros anyway. Soon after digital cameras appeared as computer accessories which were taxed at 2% over VAT (total then 20%) so everyone ran out and bought a digital camera. Since then the extra 2% has been dropped and so has the taxes on film cameras, film, etc, but it's a small comfort to the handful of people that care. Around 2002 the first all digital store opened. There are still places that will develop C-41 film, but most of their business is prints from digital media. You find them in places frequented by tourists. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM New word I coined 12/13/09, "Sub-Wikipedia" adj, describing knowledge or understanding, as in he has a sub-wikipedia understanding of the situation. i.e possessing less facts or information than can be found in the Wikipedia. |
#5
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Another tiny nail ...
Bowser wrote,on my timestamp of 19/03/2010 10:27 PM:
"Rol_Lei Nut" wrote in message ... Alan Browne wrote: I shot some 120 C-41 last night (and a s- load of digital). I told my buddy where to drop it off for me with the instructions, a store with a really good lab about 20 minutes away. He dropped them off this am. The store left me a message, so I called them... Turnaround : 1 week. They don't do 120 anymore (E-6 or C-41). 35mm only. They don't do E-6 anymore for any format (not enough turnover to manage the chems properly). If you can't find Super Barricato di Bolgheri wine in your local shop, do you assume that's disappearing from the planet as well? If you can't find it, then the answer is yes. You know what's surprising? The constant reinforcement that digital-heads need to reassure themselves they made a good "choice". Or to try to explain to themselves the fortunes spent chasing their whatever-megapixel whatsit. Hey: if film is such a problem for any of you, just freakin STOP USING it and **** off once and for all! Move on and get lost, for chrissakes. Film users are sick and tired of all that "nail" bull****: it's definitely getting very rusty... |
#6
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Another tiny nail ...
Annika1980 wrote:
Most of us have stopped using it and one of the main reasons is that it's too tough to find, and too tough to get processed. Make that, most of "you" have stoped using it because you're too lazy to find it, use it properly and process it... The point is that at some point the major manufacturers (FUJI) will decide that film is no longer profitable to produce. When that happens, what are you gonna do? Just what I'm already doing: Using films called Lucky, Maco, Ilford, Foma, Ferrania, Efke, ect... And even if you insist on Fuji film, Fuji will probably end up licensing the manufacture to somebody else. |
#7
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Another tiny nail ...
On 10-03-19 5:17 , Rol_Lei Nut wrote:
Alan Browne wrote: I shot some 120 C-41 last night (and a s- load of digital). I told my buddy where to drop it off for me with the instructions, a store with a really good lab about 20 minutes away. He dropped them off this am. The store left me a message, so I called them... Turnaround : 1 week. They don't do 120 anymore (E-6 or C-41). 35mm only. They don't do E-6 anymore for any format (not enough turnover to manage the chems properly). If you can't find Super Barricato di Bolgheri wine in your local shop, do you assume that's disappearing from the planet as well? Where did I suggest that? It just shows that if you live in the outer 'burbs where I am, the ability to get 120 or E-6 done conveniently is disappearing. As such, my inclination to shoot film is reduced another notch. Yesterday I returned a BG to a friend of mine (a pro) who still shoots a lot of 120 (mainly for weddings and portraits) and he goes all the way into the city to develop his film. He believes there is enough of a suburban market to justify a single "pro point" developer of C-41 and E-6 and that the machines are (now) ridiculously cheap to acquire. I'm tempted to invest, but I want to know how many pros in the area think they'll be using film for the next 3 years, and how much film they do per year. OTOH, the same guy said that he usually has 20 wedding bookings by this point in the season and now he has only a few. People have gone down market in wedding photography as anyone with a camera hangs out a shingle declaring themselves to be wedding photogs. The current recession doesn't help. -- gmail originated posts are filtered due to spam. |
#8
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Another tiny nail ...
On 10-03-19 11:35 , Scott W wrote:
On Mar 18, 10:29 am, Alan wrote: I shot some 120 C-41 last night (and a s- load of digital). I told my buddy where to drop it off for me with the instructions, a store with a really good lab about 20 minutes away. He dropped them off this am. The store left me a message, so I called them... Turnaround : 1 week. They don't do 120 anymore (E-6 or C-41). 35mm only. They don't do E-6 anymore for any format (not enough turnover to manage the chems properly). Film is not dead or even dying, I know this because I saw a roll of film being developed at Costco the other day. Having f roll of film being processed there shows a real resurgence in the use of film, since it had been a long time since I had seen any film being processed there. And I am sure that the low volume that Costco has had up to this point is because the aggressive ma and pa shops have been pulling the processing business away from them. Never said it was dead, just harder and harder to get done. That's called a trend. Trends reverse - but so far here it is one way. -- gmail originated posts are filtered due to spam. |
#9
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Another tiny nail ...
"Draco" wrote in message ... On Mar 18, 4:29 pm, Alan Browne wrote: I shot some 120 C-41 last night (and a s- load of digital). I told my buddy where to drop it off for me with the instructions, a store with a really good lab about 20 minutes away. He dropped them off this am. The store left me a message, so I called them... Turnaround : 1 week. They don't do 120 anymore (E-6 or C-41). 35mm only. They don't do E-6 anymore for any format (not enough turnover to manage the chems properly). -- gmail originated posts are filtered due to spam. It looks like the only way to get fast turn around for any film is to do it yourself. Now if you could find the chemistry easily... Good luck. Draco Check out Trebla brand chems from CPAC. I buy C41 developer in five liter kits. (Actually, 15 liter, but it's packaged to mix 3x5 liters). If you can measure with syringes, you can mix as little as you want. Their RA4 chemicals can be used in low-utilization roller transport processors with virtually no tar formation. Ken Hart |
#10
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Another tiny nail ...
"Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote in message ... Bruce wrote: Film isn't dead, but its position as a mass market medium for photography is coming to an end. Emerging economies are going directly to digital, so film is rapidly becoming a niche market in the developed world (no pun intended). Israel is like that. When I moved here in 1996 I sold all of my cameras because the taxes on a camera were 140% (yes one and half times the value) with new immigrant families allowed one tax free. This was before eBay and I "took a bath" on them. :-( At that rate no one really had any cameras except pros anyway. Soon after digital cameras appeared as computer accessories which were taxed at 2% over VAT (total then 20%) so everyone ran out and bought a digital camera. Since then the extra 2% has been dropped and so has the taxes on film cameras, film, etc, but it's a small comfort to the handful of people that care. Around 2002 the first all digital store opened. There are still places that will develop C-41 film, but most of their business is prints from digital media. You find them in places frequented by tourists. Geoff. Are these taxes a one time tax on initial purchase, or do they come after you every year, like a property tax? Here in the US they will tax you any way they can.....If your item is too large to hide, or you have to display it to use it, (like an automobile) then they will tax it yearly and beat you into the ground just for owning it. The only items that are not property taxed are those that you can hide, or use without going on public property. There is no fairness or logic about the system at all.....If they can steal the money from you, they will...... |
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