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najadann
1 year ago

Hardly, the film will disappear completely from the picture surface.
(Why should you still photograph with film today, doesn’t make much sense?
Quality is poorer and the environment is also more burdensome.)

Hdhdidbs
2 years ago

Hi.

in the near future rather not. Here, supply and demand plays quite strongly with pure; if only a few are photographing with film, you have to make the individual products more expensive. Of course, inflation is going to play in.

VG Hdhdidb

GammaFoto
1 year ago
Reply to  Hdhdidbs

only that films are very close and constantly sold out. If manufacturers were to produce more and demand less would also sell more. If there were so few analogue photographers, the demand would not be so high, would it??

Uneternal
2 years ago

If film photography again increases so that it is profitable for Kodak to produce the film in larger quantities, then maybe.

At the moment, however, despite the very great trend towards instant film, I think this is rather unlikely. The hipsters who photograph analogue are still a very small niche.

ponter
2 years ago

On the following page there is an instructive contribution.

https://kwerfeldein.de/2021/12/15/short-erklaert-kodak-gold/

GammaFoto
1 year ago
Reply to  ponter

It’s just stupid that he’s been a year and a half…
Prices have risen even further, that there would be more production somewhere you can’t see. Even if it takes a year to go ahead, manufacturers should know that demand is very high and perhaps even further increases, yet the films are even more scarce. The explanation given is no longer conclusive