twelvetone12
Member
Hahaha I know the basics quite well, I'm from Bologna
(but live abroad and miss it a lot!)

Thanks,I'm not directly able to confirm that, however our stock of chemistry came directly from the former operations. It's plausible that they used up all of the "newer" components in their final runs, but it seems unlikely to be the case across the board. I'll pose the question to the founders and report back.
Are you able to tell me if some of these same 50+ year old chemicals had been used right up to the last coating run by Ferrania Technologies?
Follow-up...
I spoke directly with Nico and Marco yesterday and asked about the 50 year old chemistry.
According to Marco, the vast majority of our "inherited" chemistry is in the form of intermediate products that, YES, were used right up to the end of Ferrania's final coating run.
Ferrania developed a policy way back in the 1930s that they would produce intermediate components in bulk and in a way that keeps them stable for very long periods of time - and only use them "on demand" to create finished chemistry for production. Some of the science was a bit over my head, but Marco claims that this practice was unique to Ferrania among major manufacturers, and it's this very practice that allows us to use many components that are 20, 30, even 50 years old. In fact, without this long-standing practice, and our inheritance of tons of these intermediate products, it's possible this project would never have moved forward.
The reason we have decided to synthesize a few new components is because of the gap in time between Ferrania's last production run and our taking over the LRF. During that time, as you might assume, many of these intermediate products were not properly stored. And of course there was a time even after we moved everything to the LRF when we had no climate control. If there had not been this "break" in the storage conditions, we would still be able to use everything... In the case of some components, all we had to do was put them in a desiccant "oven" for a short time to return them to usability. Other components, however, slipped below the purity standards we require and although we could use them, it is better to keep them as reference materials only and synthesize new stuff.
I found this conversation entirely fascinating and it was actually the longest I've spoken to Marco in some time. He was quite passionate and animated when discussing this topic.
So thank you Nzoomed!
Thanks Dave!
Personally i don't care if they choose to use the "old stock" if they think it is OK. They know what they are doing. And it's much better if they use these chemicals instead of having them stored around.
As for the synthesis lab, it seems really interesting, let's hope they have success in creating whatever chemicals they need!
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Cool, nice to see old machine being used.
Are you still on track to sell bulk C-41? bulk e-6?
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Bulk materials are of course easier to make, but they will come only when we are able to produce in bulk. Each miniJumbo that comes off the line will need to be maximized for sales so that we can grow our operation to a point where we can produce in bulk. Unless reality changes suddenly, this means finished rolls of 35mm and 120 primarily, and our two cinema formats in lesser volume. And we're likely to be "stuck" on these products for most of our first year. We would like to make at least one batch of 4x5 next year, and at least enough 35mm cinema to shoot a feature - but these will only happen if we can do it without affecting sales of the four core formats.
We are starting with E-6 of course, but C-41 should be relatively close behind. Again, because of our low capacity, we will have to watch our numbers closely... For at least our first 12-18 months, the #1 cost in our factory will be opportunity cost.
Hi Dave, all sounds logical but also consider that lately it seems that labs are thinking e6 is going to dissappear.**.. And consider also that the key to FF's success is operating at the right scale. And right now, labs that want to do E6 are stuck (i guess) between kits that are too small, and bulk chemistry too big for current demand. So selling the chemicals as a kit of the right scale for the labs could help keep e6 alive, and you guys need to have labs to still be e6-ready for when you introduce ferrania's first film (CorradoChrome 100)...
** GarageBoy's comment above is very important. The same is happening in my country, the only lab that does E6 is going to stop offering this service because their batch of chemicals is running out (and I presume that they don't want to order more)
The same is happening in my country, the only lab that does E6 is going to stop offering this service because their batch of chemicals is running out (and I presume that they don't want to order more)
Bulk materials are of course easier to make, but they will come only when we are able to produce in bulk. Each miniJumbo that comes off the line will need to be maximized for sales so that we can grow our operation to a point where we can produce in bulk. Unless reality changes suddenly, this means finished rolls of 35mm and 120 primarily, and our two cinema formats in lesser volume. And we're likely to be "stuck" on these products for most of our first year. We would like to make at least one batch of 4x5 next year, and at least enough 35mm cinema to shoot a feature - but these will only happen if we can do it without affecting sales of the four core formats.
We are starting with E-6 of course, but C-41 should be relatively close behind. Again, because of our low capacity, we will have to watch our numbers closely... For at least our first 12-18 months, the #1 cost in our factory will be opportunity cost.
Couldn't they just team up with someone like Bellini Foto (who makes already e6 chem and is not too expensive) for that?
So to clarify.
Will 100 foot rolls be up for sale or not initially?
Not initially. We are starting with our four core formats only - 135/36, 120, S8/15m, and 16mm/30m.
I can say that bulk rolls and 4x5 are at the top of our list for limited runs as soon as they are feasible (which means not interfering with availability of the core products), but it's quite impossible to put this on any kind of timeline...
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