On Wed, 21 Jul 2004, William Robb wrote:

> Ilford has been producing film since well before it became a niche
> market.

Agreed. But their plant is all modern so they have spent money to
continue development as it became a niche market would you agree?

> You are saying that some hitherto unknown player is going to spend a
> pile of money to buy a coating facility and spend another pile of
> money on R&D to service an almost non existent market.
> And that they are going to profit by this foolishness.

No, not necessarily. I am actually suggesting that it's easily possible
that an existing company such as Ilford will move into a niche market if
they see it. They already have the coating facilities. I've picked on
Ilford because they are local to me and I know them, but it could be
someone from the asia or the eastern block?

> The trend at the moment will, if it continues as it has been, will
> probably make colour print film a smaller niche than black and white
> is now.
> It is losing it's consumer base to a new technology, it is losing
> it's professional base to a higher end of that technology, and new
> consumers and professionals aren't even considering film, if the
> sales numbers that Herb has been quoting are correct (I expect they
> are, he isn't one to post bullshit).

Now this is the crux of where we diverge I think. You're saying it'll die
out and I am saying it won't die out. Is that right? I obviously agree
that film will reduce in importance over time, (which may be short!), but
I think we just don't see eye-to-eye on the level or rate at which it
will do so. I don't feel able to predict to WHAT level film use will
fall, only that should I wish to be able to keep using film cameras I
will be able to do so for many years to come.

Incidentally by film I mean all film not just colour negative. I do agree
that colour neg is bearing the brunt of the digital onslaught though and
will be the worst hit.

Chris

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