How much longer can photographic film hold on?

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Thingy

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I recall about 20 years ago people saying that Vinyl was dead and record players/turntables were obsolete. I can still buy NEW vinyl in Scotland (Naim) and Iceland (Sigur Ros's recordings are available as both CDs and Vinyl). Turntables are still being made, the best of which are from the UK (eg Avid, Michell), Germany (Clearaudio) & USA (VPI). :whistling:

Film I suspect is a medium whose demise is equally often predicted and proved wrong. :D:laugh:
 

jrhilton

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In the UK and probably much of Europe, cinemas are either privately owned or owned by smaller companies who could not and do not want to spend the hundreds of thousands of pounds or euros necessary to convert when the projectors they already own will do the job, especially when it could be obsolete in a few years when a higher quality system is available.

Yet the UK has the second highest number digital screens in Europe, behind France, and Europe had the highest growth in digital screens in the world up to 2009 (all the figures are on the UK Film Council website and are an interesting read actually). In the UK the five big players (Odeon, Cineworld, Vue, National Amusements and Ward Anderson) actually account for more than 75% of screens across the country.

For many large cinemas/chains the cost of leasing a digital projector each month would be less of a concern than controlling staff costs and rent/rates (or for a chain - advertising costs). But as you say smaller cinemas may struggle, but a good 35mm projector with all the bells and whistles is not "cheap" these days either, and in every day use they don't last forever either.

But don't worry, film will be around for some time yet, I think the main difference in the coming years will be less choice, especially for colour.
 
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Check out this article I found today on the net.

http://apnews.myway.com//article/20110530/D9NHUNV00.html

Back to the topic, the article.

I doubt the number of 20 million films total in the US this year.
Because I have the official numbers for Germany.
Last year in Germany almost 18 million films were sold.
And the US market is still the biggest market worldwide (2. China, 3. Japan, 4. Germany).
US population is more than 300 million people. Germany is 80 million.
Most probably the number for the US ist still significantly higher.
Looks like bad research from the author of this article.

Best regards,
Henning
 

CGW

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Back to the topic, the article.

I doubt the number of 20 million films total in the US this year.
Because I have the official numbers for Germany.
Last year in Germany almost 18 million films were sold.
And the US market is still the biggest market worldwide (2. China, 3. Japan, 4. Germany).
US population is more than 300 million people. Germany is 80 million.
Most probably the number for the US ist still significantly higher.
Looks like bad research from the author of this article.

Best regards,
Henning

More like misreading on your part:

"At the turn of the 21st century, American shutterbugs were buying close to a billion rolls of film per year. This year, they might buy a mere 20 million, plus 31 million single-use cameras - the beach-resort staple vacationers turn to in a pinch, according to the Photo Marketing Association."

That seems to add up to around 51 million rolls. Not much, granted, but that's how the PMA called it. Somehow, I'm inclined to believe them. Take a look at the chart that tracks film sales, too.
 
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More like misreading on your part:

"At the turn of the 21st century, American shutterbugs were buying close to a billion rolls of film per year. This year, they might buy a mere 20 million, plus 31 million single-use cameras - the beach-resort staple vacationers turn to in a pinch, according to the Photo Marketing Association."

No misreading by me. I know about the number of SUC's.
I have compared single films.
The number I have mentioned from Germany is excluding SUC's.
Therefore my comparison is correct.

Best regards,
Henning
 

CGW

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No misreading by me. I know about the number of SUC's.
I have compared single films.
The number I have mentioned from Germany is excluding SUC's.
Therefore my comparison is correct.

Best regards,
Henning

Do the math, man. There's a "roll" of film in each and every single-use camera. You doubted the U.S. figure of 20 million rolls. Like I said, it's projected to be around 50 million but not likely more. For Kodak and others, it's the dollars spent on film that matter and it's cratered--no basis for interpretation there.
 
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Do the math, man. There's a "roll" of film in each and every single-use camera. You doubted the U.S. figure of 20 million rolls.

Of course there is one film in every SUC. But that is not the point, not at all.

If 18 million single films (excluding SUC's) for normal camera use were sold in Germany alone (Germany being only at 4. position of worldwide sales), than it is very unlikely that in the USA (biggest market worldwide, almost 4x Germanys population) only 20 million single films for normal camera use will be sold this year.

Best regards,
Henning
 

2F/2F

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Of course there is one film in every SUC. But that is not the point, not at all.

If 18 million single films (excluding SUC's) for normal camera use were sold in Germany alone (Germany being only at 4. position of worldwide sales), than it is very unlikely that in the USA (biggest market worldwide, almost 4x Germanys population) only 20 million single films for normal camera use will be sold this year.

Best regards,
Henning

Why is that unlikely to you? All it would mean would be that a greater percentage of Germans use film than do United States of Americans. I wouldn't find that hard to believe, knowing how our national culture promotes jumping to the latest and greatest in consumer electronics technology. I am not saying that you or the other guy are right or wrong...simply that I don't think it is that unbelievable that a relatively small nation like Germany, especially with its rich photographic tradition, could approach the U.S.A. in film sales.
 

CGW

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"If 18 million single films (excluding SUC's) for normal camera use were sold in Germany alone (Germany being only at 4. position of worldwide sales), than it is very unlikely that in the USA (biggest market worldwide, almost 4x Germanys population) only 20 million single films for normal camera use will be sold this year."

No worries if you chose to disregard the data. I just don't see the point, though, unless your data are somehow more revealing. This contrarian denial of N. American reality is tiresome, both here and in other threads. What's next? A conspiracy theory about chronic under-reporting of film sales?
 

Diapositivo

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By reading this forum it seems that in the US, in general, digital has taken much more market share than in Europe. In Europe nobody would ever wonder how can people still buy films, for instance. Films are sold at every photography shop (and elsewhere) and are developed everywhere. Until 2007 or 2008 the professional laboratory where I had my slides processed said they saw no diminishing of business in film developing.

The US has a population of around 270 millions against 90 millions of Germany. That would mean that on average Germans consume three times more film than US citizens. That is probably true, and probably holds true for some other countries in Europe.

Just to make another example, I read people in this forum have difficulties in finding a 5 litres kit for C41. I found without any problems two kits which I could order any day and probably would find some more kits with a bit of research.
 
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People in the US are conditioned and trained by high-tech marketers to desire and purchase exactly what the marketers want them to desire and purchase. And just as animals will instinctivly eat themselves to death when presented with an unlimited food supply, so will people in the US consume themselves to death when presented with an unlimited supply of high-tech gadgets for sale.

Right now there is a television advertisement making the rounds. A suburban consumer is proudly watching as deliverymen carry his brand new widescreen 3D HDTV television in its box through the front door of his home. He then looks up to see the delivery truck sitting in his driveway with a sign on it reading "4D HDTV Coming Soon."

"Whoa! Wait. What's the 4D TV?" he asks.

"Pretty much the best thing I've ever seen in my life." comes the reply.

"Can I get that one instead?" he asks.

"No."

Cut to a small girl dancing in the front yard while singing "You got the wrong TV, silly head."

And so it is also in the US with digital cameras. And virtually everything else. It's an utterly amazing phenomenon to see.

See: You Got The Wrong TV, Silly Head!

Ken
 

Aristophanes

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Digital adoption is higher in NA most likely because:

- younger population
- higher penetration rate of home PC's
- larger, homogenous market leading to easier distribution and marketing

It's moot. If the numbers are slightly off in the article, they will be worse soon regardless. The precipitous downward trend is not contested. Do you see any film cameras advertised anywhere at all?

No camera, no film. Legacy product and a used market driven by eBay will not keep a substrate factory open forever. Or for even a few years.
 

Diapositivo

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No new cameras doesn't mean no film, or no new films, IMO. The digital revolution brought a huge amount of perfectly fine film cameras on the second-hand market and that killed the market for new film cameras. Film sales certainly declined but did so with a very different pattern. That's not to say that film sales haven't been shrinking in the last ten years, they surely have, but at by far a different rate than film cameras.

If I get all the figures more or less right - I'm going by heart here, don't quote my figures - film cameras virtually ceased selling already in 2002 - 2003. Ten years after the "revolution", there are only a couple camera producers (Cosina and Nikon, maybe Canon) in the consumer market. Then there are all the Leica, Rolleiflex, Alpa, Arca-Swiss, Hasselblad and many others and all the LF producers. It's niche market but it is meaningful they are still alive. The fact that some firms producing enlargers still produce them today is also noticeable.

Film products, on the other hand, is mostly still alive. Practically all film producers that were alive 10 years ago are alive now, with the exception of Konica - Sakura. Agfa still produces film (as an OEM). Most chemicals producers are still alive.

Some are just prematurely singing the de profundis to an industry in a sad anticipation of a death which so far did not knock at the door.

If you see it in terms of "surviving catalogue", as far as film cameras are concerned possibly 98% of the year 2000 catalogue is out of production, while in the film and chemistry sectors probably 95% of the year 2000 catalogue survived.

Actually if we get an "almanac" of the photographic market of the year 1990, some twenty years ago, we might discover that film offering is much broader now than it was then.

Personally I have worries only about the continuation of mass-market laboratories, which I see as the weak ring in the chain.

Film cameras are very easy to manufacture: just take a digital camera (any), and adapt it. When the demand for new film cameras rises again, producers will be easily able to produce film versions or their digital cameras. Or maybe even Jeckyll-Hyde versions, with interchangeable backs, one for film, the other for digital (à la Leica R9 or better).

The sky is still solidly resting on its feet :laugh:
 

artonpaper

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When photography was first announced, it seemed certain to do away with engraving and etching and other printmaking media. But they are still around. There is enough of a niche market so that one can get everything one needs and there are even new products like solar plates. And now after many years, it's possible to buy carbon tissue and pre-coated albumin and salted paper. It's not a certainty to be sure, but the odds are good someone will continue to produce film for the foreseeable future.
 

Film-Niko

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Recently I've had an interesting and long talk to a Fuji rep at a photo fair. We've talked about the markets, and what is going on on the different markets, too.
The Fuji rep said that the US market is still the biggest market for photo film worldwide, with about 30 million rolls of camera films 35mm, 120, 220 (single use cameras are not included in this figure, they come extra). That confirms what Mr Serger has said here.
He further said in Japan film is still very popular and was more stable during the last years compared to US. In Europe Germany, Austria, Swiss, Italy, UK, Czech and Poland have a relative strong film user basis.

I think the article contains some serious mistakes. First, the author does a mistake experienced analysts try to avoid: He does only a simple linear interpolation of data of the past. But we know from economic and technologic historiy that trends are running only a limited time in linear shape, then the curve in most cases flattened and rebounds take place. We already see it in some areas, e.g. sheet film, toy cameras, medium format, where stabilisation or increasing sales were reported by the manufactureres.

Second, he ignores new market trends like lomography and the resurgence of instant photography by TIP and Fuji (new instax).
Lomography is film exclusively and it is the company with the highest growth rates in the whole photo industry, including digital (you won't find a digital photo company with growth rates of more than 50 % p.a. the Fuji rep told me).

It all reminds me of similar articles ten years ago, when such people said that in one decade, till 2010, film will vanish.
Now, as these guys were proven wrong with their former prognosis, they now say film will vanish in this decade till 2020.
I am convinced we will be here in 2020 with lots of film around and the same discussions, and the same people will say that film will vanish in the next decade till 2030......:wink:.

A lot of these articles is only digital marketing: They say you have to switch to digital, even if you prefer film, because film will vanish.

We shouldn't do the mistake to join in this strategy and repeat their marketing phrases by starting doom and gloom threads.
By this we are doing exactly their job, and doing what they want: Discouraging photographers to use film.
 

Steve Smith

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The Fuji rep said that the US market is still the biggest market for photo film worldwide, with about 30 million rolls of camera films

Whilst that figure is a fraction of what it once was, it is still a significant number. It might be a bit low for the likes of Kodak and Fujifilm who are set up to manufacture in vast quantities but if there were no film manufacturers, it would represent a large gap in the market which someone would fill.


Steve.
 

CGW

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...but if there were no film manufacturers, it would represent a large gap in the market which someone would fill.

Don't you get it? No Kodak or Fuji means the market has already collapsed. That's why they might choose to bail out. Demand would have already tanked relative to what's left today.
 

Steve Smith

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Don't you get it? No Kodak or Fuji means the market has already collapsed.

Not quite. Kodak and Fujifilm might give up when the quantities are not sufficient to maintain the overheads of their manufacturing facilities. That still leaves a large demand waiting to be supplied.


Steve.
 

CGW

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Not quite. Kodak and Fujifilm might give up when the quantities are not sufficient to maintain the overheads of their manufacturing facilities. That still leaves a large demand waiting to be supplied.


Steve.

Doubtful. You're assuming demand will be stable, which is unlikely given the plummeting trend in sales. What will prompt withdrawl by the major players is an irreversible decline in demand we're not able to staunch. At that point, there won't be much left for anyone. People kvetch now about rising film/paper prices. I'm thinking your future won't be much fun--or affordable.
 

David Brown

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OMG! OMG! :cry:

Film is dead. There won't be anymore in the near future. That does it. My cameras are all for sale. Ten bucks for the lot (plus shipping and handling)

And the darkroom is being converted into a computer room.

:sleeping:
 

CGW

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OMG! OMG! :cry:

Film is dead. There won't be anymore in the near future. That does it. My cameras are all for sale. Ten bucks for the lot (plus shipping and handling)

And the darkroom is being converted into a computer room.

:sleeping:

Don't dawdle. They'll be worthless by the end of the week!
 
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