Barney
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I have seen some 220 about but never KodakI'm pretty new to MF this year, but I didn't think 220 existed anymore?
With 120, I get 12 shots at 6x6 on the 124G
My Voigtlander Bessa folder gets 16 shots with the 6x4.5 mask, 8 shots at 9x6.
Film has always been expensive but it was the only game in town.Just below the advert is Portra 400 (120) for 5 rolls @ £81.99.....erm so using a Rollei and inc dev and postage works out about £2 per shot for one roll. I wonder how many newbies are put off trying film because of the cost.
Nah..in the old days you used to get a free film back after you posted your shots off for prints, anyway Portra, about 5 years ago, was about £20 for 5 rolls so it's up 400%......and I remember a report years ago that said the packaging cost more than the film (probably inc the cassette as well?).Film has always been expensive but it was the only game in town.
It may well have been cheap 5 years ago but if you go back to 1965, when I started using a camera seriously, a 36 shot cassette of HP3 cost 7 shillings and 5 pence, which, according to the bank of England inflation calculator, is roughly £5.50. Retail Price Maintenance had only just been abolished and there were few or no discounts from shops. Indeed, when the abolition of RPM began to bite, the manufacturers simply increased their wholesale prices which, coupled with the inflation that started to take off almost concurrently, increased the price of film and other photographic items, rather than reducing them.Nah..in the old days you used to get a free film back after you posted your shots off for prints, anyway Portra, about 5 years ago, was about £20 for 5 rolls so it's up 400%......and I remember a report years ago that said the packaging cost more than the film (probably inc the cassette as well?).
Film has always been expensive but it was the only game in town.
Digital came along and was effectively free to use, once you had the camera.
Thus we progress.
I think that, for the vast majority of people who record images, all the costs are shared out with other uses for the same equipment. The cameras that so many use now are part of their mobile data device, which does many other things.Yes, ‘effectively free’, however don’t forget the hardware and software for processing the images.
True for those people who worship at the altar of technology and therefor sacrifice themselves thereon. For the rest of us, we sometimes upgrade but only when we chose to.File get bigger, software more complex and the computer slows. So a bigger and faster computer is needed.
Cameras do, for a very small minority.Plus, unfortunately, cameras become obsolete very quickly.
Looks like respooled expired cine film. Personally, I’d pay a few pound more per roll and buy Kodak Gold 36 exposures so you know what you’re getting.AI descriptions are taking over E-Bay also.
I had a look at some sample images for this film and the colour rendition is right up my street although some shots have the dreaded pink colour cast.
So it must be Kodak.
is that good or bad?I think I was wrong re remjet. The label on the cannister refers to C-41 process so I'm now thinking Orwo NC400.
I was about to say the same thing after reading a few threads elsewhere about it.I think I was wrong re remjet. The label on the cannister refers to C-41 process so I'm now thinking Orwo NC400.
Well, it’s good in as much as any film processing shop can deal with it as it just goes through the normal C-41 line and no problems with having to remove the remjet coating first.is that good or bad?
Yes, respooled Vision3 is available on the Bay for a similar price for either 30 or 36 exposures, although there is the extra hassle of removing the remjet and if C-41 process is used instead of ECN-2 there are issues with colour crossover, etc. I find C-41 does have the benefit of having a longer shelf life than ECN-2 though.I still think it’s overpriced for 24 frames.
On this occasion 24 frames suited me, i would usually shirk at 24 and go for 36.I was about to say the same thing after reading a few threads elsewhere about it.
The colours look very green tinted, and the grain is pretty strong even for a 400 iso colour film.
I still think it’s overpriced for 24 frames.
No, no, no!lose lots of lead
dont panic,No, no, no!
I was thinking more that, as a newcomer to film, you may be better off with a more established emulsion that delivers consistent results with decent colours, but I also understand the hobby element.On this occasion 24 frames suited me, i would usually shirk at 24 and go for 36.
RE the cost and perceived value, this is my hobby, and regarding my other hobbies, I regularly lose golf balls(big hitter), throw pounds and pounds worth of stuff in a pond when fishing and lose lots of lead and terminal equipment also. A roll of film is here nor there. And if it is a new coating from a new supplier I am even more happy to support it.
Thanks Steve for trying to help,I was thinking more that, as a newcomer to film, you may be better off with a more established emulsion that delivers consistent results with decent colours, but I also understand the hobby element.
My dad was a plumber so often had bits of lead pipe. As teenagers me and my brothers would melt down the lead in the back yard and pour it into moulds to make fishing weights. No thought of health and safety seems to have occurred.dont panic,
my bad
lead substitute,
I am that old I still call swan shot lead. I don't think lead has been available for years in the coarse fishing world,
Sea fishing may still be using some lead bit is being phased out there I think.
Love that Kevin, Kids don't play anymore,My dad was a plumber so often had bits of lead pipe. As teenagers me and my brothers would melt down the lead in the back yard and pour it into moulds to make fishing weights. No thought of health and safety seems to have occurred.

Judging by my experience you should get it this week.Expected to be delivered 29th October according to Amazon. I'm guessing the order won't be fulfilled with such a long lead time.