Posted on 06/22/2009 2:34:46 PM PDT by Paleo Conservative
It was great stuff. My dad has some Kodachrome slides from the 40’s and 50’s that look like they were shot yesterday. Supposedly the EU is taking some sort of anti-trust action against Kodak to try and block this?
Her name is Sharbat Gula
Here she is recently
Typical of a dieing medium to refer to a 40 year old song and a 25 year old photograph. Shows you how out of touch and living-in-the-past they truly are.
They’re seriously going order them to keep producing an unprofitable product?
by order of Wesley Mooch.
So similar, yet so different. Of course, she was “showing hair” in the first one, and if she were “showing hair” in the second one she probably wouldn’t look quite so harsh.
That would be pretty difficult, especially since there are no labs processing Kodachome in Europe anymore. All European and North American Kodachrome proessing is handled by one processing plant in Kansas.
http://www.dwaynesphoto.com/
20 years ago, business school textbooks were predicting Kodaks demise as the move to digital photography was already written on the wall.
My wife has eyes that green.
There is an effort underway to purchase the patents and continue production of Kodachrome, because it is essential for some limited and high value photography. If people will pay $100 or more for a roll of film, and twice that much to process it, it will survive.
Nooooooo! They be takin my Kodachrome away!
She fell out of the Ugly Tree, and damn if she didn’t hit every branch on the way down...
I had family who used to live in Parsons, KS, and I visited there frequently as a child. There’s really not much to the town. No commercial air service within 60 miles, no commercial bus service.
Live most of your life running from the Soviets and then the Taliban and we’ll see how you age
June 22, 2009
Kodak Retires KODACHROME Film; Celebrates Life of Oldest Film Icon in its Portfolio
Newer KODAK Films and Digital Cameras are Preferred Choice for Today’s Photographers
ROCHESTER, N.Y., June 22 -- Eastman Kodak Company announced today that it will retire KODACHROME Color Film this year, concluding its 74-year run as a photography icon.
Sales of KODACHROME Film, which became the world’s first commercially successful color film in 1935, have declined dramatically in recent years as photographers turned to newer KODAK Films or to the digital imaging technologies that Kodak pioneered. Today, KODACHROME Film represents just a fraction of one percent of Kodak’s total sales of still-picture films.
“KODACHROME Film is an iconic product and a testament to Kodak’s long and continuing leadership in imaging technology,” said Mary Jane Hellyar, President of Kodak’s Film, Photofinishing and Entertainment Group. "It was certainly a difficult decision to retire it, given its rich history. However, the majority of today's photographers have voiced their preference to capture images with newer technology – both film and digital. Kodak remains committed to providing the highest-performing products – both film and digital – to meet those needs."
While Kodak now derives about 70% of its revenues from commercial and consumer digital businesses, it is the global leader in the film business. Kodak has continued to bring innovative new film products to market, including seven new professional still films and several new VISION2 and VISION3 motion picture films in the past three years.These new still film products are among those that have become the dominant choice for those professional and advanced amateur photographers who use KODAK Films.
Among the well-known professional photographers who used KODACHROME Film is Steve McCurry, whose picture of a young Afghan girl captured the hearts of millions of people around the world as she peered hauntingly from the cover of National Geographic Magazine in 1985.
As part of a tribute to KODACHROME Film, Kodak will donate the last rolls of the film to George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film in Rochester, which houses the world’s largest collection of cameras and related artifacts. McCurry will shoot one of those last rolls and the images will be donated to Eastman House.
“The early part of my career was dominated by KODACHROME Film, and I reached for that film to shoot some of my most memorable images,” said McCurry. “While KODACHROME Film was very good to me, I have since moved on to other films and digital to create my images. In fact, when I returned to shoot the ‘Afghan Girl’ 17 years later, I used KODAK PROFESSIONAL EKTACHROME Film E100VS to create that image, rather than KODACHROME Film as with the original.”
For all of its magic, KODACHROME is a complex film to manufacture and an even more complex film to process. There is only one remaining photofinishing lab in the world – Dwayne’s Photo in Parsons, Kansas – that processes KODACHROME Film, precisely because of the difficulty of processing. This lack of widespread processing availability, as well as the features of newer films introduced by Kodak over the years, has accelerated the decline of demand for KODACHROME Film.
During its run, KODACHROME Film filled a special niche in the annals of the imaging world. It was used to capture some of the best-known photographs in history, while also being the film of choice for family slide shows of the Baby Boom generation.
To celebrate the film’s storied history, Kodak has created a gallery of iconic images, including the Afghan girl and other McCurry photos, as well as others from professional photographers Eric Meola and Peter Guttman on its website: www.kodak.com/go/kodachrometribute. Special podcasts featuring McCurry and Guttman will also be featured on the website.
Kodak estimates that current supplies of KODACHROME Film will last until early this fall at the current sales pace. Dwayne’s Photo has indicated it will continue to offer processing for the film through 2010. Current KODACHROME Film users are encouraged to try other KODAK Films, such as KODAK PROFESSIONAL EKTACHROME E100G and EKTAR 100 Film. These films both feature extremely fine grain. For more information, please visit www.kodak.com/go/professional.
About Kodak
As the world's foremost imaging innovator, Kodak helps consumers, businesses, and creative professionals unleash the power of pictures and printing to enrich their lives.
To learn more, visit http://www.kodak.com and follow our blogs and more at http://www.kodak.com/go/followus.
More than 70 million people worldwide manage, share and create photo gifts online at KODAK Gallery --join for free today at www.kodakgallery.com.
This was a great film. I’ve yet to see a digital image - still or moving- that has the same depth of tones.
Yup. I think I shot miles of the stuff back in the day.
End of an Era.
How many patents could possibly be current for a film that has been on the market since 1935? Perhaps there are trade secrets that haven't been patented? A few weeks ago, I was thinking of buying a good used Nikon F5 for shooting Kodachrome, but not at $100 per roll.
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