That Ex-Agfa capital belongs to Polaroid and is working for Polaroid for more than a decade now.
InovisCoat has a contract that they can use the infrastructure in certain time-slots. But with the recent insolvency and further brain-drain that has of course become even more challenging.
Despite their start with original Agfa machinery from the former Agfa-Leverkusen plant and Agfa experts they needed more than a decade to produce a decent colour negative film. And had two insolvencies!
So you can imagine how difficult establishing an economically and technologically working colour film production is.
Best regards,
Henning
Thanks Henning for the insight again, I know you provided a good view of the different actors there and what would be the name that encompasses Monheim's manufacturing complex independently of the end product purchaser (Filmotec, Polaroid, etc)?
Honestly as it is a complicated network and as an outsider I just name it with the most recognisable brand.
Neither it is simple to what happened to Agfa (the film arm of the company that died off). It went during the cliff of the digital revolution and unfortunately also the quality of it.
Interesting about the knowledge loss as well as difficulties, thought positive that Polaroid can back it up. In the
In an instant Eschede factory visit video, there are some figures that they produce many more million packs of instant film now vs years ago (can't cite it now) which impacts positively on the requirement for color substrate. Well, and Fuji also makes investments in Instax due to that demand.
So it is an interesting catch-22 of some sort. Kodak is holding prices high just for 35mm as there is a high demand; I have come at peace with high-ish prices given the quality one gets. Fuji is the mystery around, but they are reportedly making 35mm C41 consumer film as well as your report of new Fujichrome shipments.
That's certainly true. The race to the bottom was more of a free fall given how fast it all went. It took Fuji 1 year to go from full production in their EU film plant to total shutdown. One day they were pumping out pallets of film per day, the next day, they had to pull the plug. Those last pallets were the film that we could buy for €1/roll for some time until stock ran out. Which actually still hasn't happened, entirely - I can still purchase film here from those last production runs, but now it's more like €8/roll. Same film, just more expired.
I recall seeing some resources from auctioning the Dutch film plant a decade ago. Quite sad how that went and interesting to know how the big manufacturers had sites per continent. Related to Ilford Harman by Geography is Kodak Harrow which closed relatively recently and now that I bring the topic, no idea of what happened to that plant's capital given that it manufactured color paper and film.