[alt-photo] Re: "sustainable market for film"
BOB KISS
bobkiss at caribsurf.com
Wed Mar 24 14:21:59 GMT 2010
DEAR JUDY ET ALIA,
Though many people are moving toward HD digital video in the movie
business (especially for special effects movies) many are quite conservative
and adore (quite rightly) that special look of shooting on color negative
and having release prints made. Even if movies in the near future are
distributed digitally, many Directors of Photography will insist on
originating on color negative film.
It is nothing to shoot hundreds of thousands of feet of film to make
one movie. Until this dries up there will be some form of film being made.
On my trip to Paris in Dec 2008 (to attend the FIE congress-I am a
fencing coach) I was amazed to see how many European
commercial/advertising/fashion photographers insisted on shooting film,
mostly medium format, then scanning their choices on order to Frotoshop and
FTP files to the magazines and clients.
CHEERS!
BOB
-----Original Message-----
From: alt-photo-process-list-bounces at lists.altphotolist.org
[mailto:alt-photo-process-list-bounces at lists.altphotolist.org] On Behalf Of
Judy Seigel
Sent: Tuesday, March 23, 2010 11:16 PM
To: The alternative photographic processes mailing list
Subject: [alt-photo] Re: "sustainable market for film"
I think the comment about "sustainable market" for film may miss the
point. As long as the folks (note, please, polite term for relics, or
fossils, or --- ----s) who learned photography with film and still use it,
remain active, the "market" for film may well be "sustainable" in some
form or other.
But when the time comes (if not already here) that students learning
photography learn digital -- and film is only a specialty or relic (maybe
with a film-making "list" on line) as, odds are, it will be... there will
be a dwindling unto collapse of that "market." It may not happen in our
life times, and we can be thankful for that, but it will happen.
Then, perhaps, folks will learn to coat some flexible material with a
silver solution (as we learned to coat a sheet of paper with, for
instance, gum bichromate solution) and make "alternate photographs" with
old style "film," but..... where is the market for buggy whips nowadays
(other than antique stores) ? Is there a factory still making them? (not
to mention that roll cameras would also go out of production).
And here I mostly guess, tho I daresay someone on this list will know
more, if not all: It's my understanding that the making and use of film
and analog photo products are environmentally grievous (for instance I
remember list discussion of problems for folks with septic tanks in
disposing of their solutions). Is it possible that digital photography
will be considerably less troublesome ?
Judy
On Tue, 23 Mar 2010, Jeremy Moore wrote:
> I wouldn't say "shoot fast", but "shoot a lot." If there's a sustainable
> market there will be film. It may not be on the massive scale of Kodak,
but
> there will be film. Hell, you can still get your buggy whip repaired:
> http://jedediahsbuggywhip.com/
>
> <http://jedediahsbuggywhip.com/>-Jeremy-
>
> On Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 12:32 PM, etienne garbaux <
> photographeur at nerdshack.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>> Shoot fast. According to friends in the industry, 120 film from reliable
>> suppliers is unlikely to survive another decade. Even 35mm film from
>> reliable suppliers may be gone by then.
>>
>> Best regards,
>>
>> etienne
>>
>>
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