srs5694 said:Incidentally, I noticed the other day that Adorama sells Ilford RA-4 paper (for prints from color negatives). Dead Link Removed Just out of curiosity, does anybody have experience with this paper? Is it actually made by Ilford, or is it a rebadged product made by somebody else?
ilfochrome?gbroadbridge said:Ilford do not make color paper
srs5694 said:Incidentally, I noticed the other day that Adorama sells Ilford RA-4 paper (for prints from color negatives). Dead Link Removed Just out of curiosity, does anybody have experience with this paper? Is it actually made by Ilford, or is it a rebadged product made by somebody else?
Not the same Ilford. This is Ilford in Switzerland, not Ilford/Harman in the UKcvik said:ilfochrome?![]()
Bob Carnie said:Ilfords colour lux was/is? a beautiful colour ra4 paper , I prefered this paper over fujiflex and kodaks duraflex.
I have **no** business interfering with your business decisions... I've ben involved in a number of them ... and I'm somewhat familiar with the "mechanics" of it all: It is necessary to temper wish-fulfillment with economics - not a pretty sight.Simon R Galley said:Dear All,
Its a long time since we made colour film ( early 1960's ) and the simple answer is that I cannot envisage any circumstances where ILFORD Photo / HARMAN technology Limited the UK monochrome company would make colour film or colour paper.
There are two parts to reply to, here:As many people pointed out why would we do it?, I think KODAK, FUJI and the others make some rather good products, and it would not match our business model and strategy, we want to be the best in Black & White, it
would cost millions to develop a range of colour products we would rather invest in and support our key competence MONO:
Ed Sukach said:1. "Kodak and Fuji make some rather good products". True. I have/ had (and will be, until my stocks run out) a dedicated user of Ilfocolor paper. To my eye, it was SUPERIOR to both Kodak (especially Kodak) and Fuji. Not only was the sheer quality BETTER, but there was an extraordinary stability of processing charceteristics- Lot-to-lot, and SIZE-to-SIZE. The latter is especially important to those among us who toil in our humble darkrooms in the dead of night.
A question I have: Where/ how ... was Ilfocolor produced? Was it made in the Swiss facility, along with Ilfochrome? Is the plant/ equipment lying fallow, has it been melted down for scrap ... is it being used by someone (OJI?) else?
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