I think that there will "always" be specialty shops that will carry
chemicals for photographers. If you check out Bolstick and Sullivan (I think
that is there name) or Photographic Formulary and there are even some places
that you can buy film for 620, 127 and 628 cameras. Apparently there are
more models of large format cameras being made now than twenty years ago and
some of the new models are very large, like 16X20 and 8X20. Buying a used
film camera on ebay is much less of a financial risk than ordering a brand
new 5 grand large format camera if the longevity of film is your greatest
concern. But than those in large format believe that it will be the last
survivor in film as it is highly unlikely that digital cameras will ever
replace the deliberation and slowness that large format entails.

I have just started being serious in 4X5 and have also used a D2X and they
are totally different animals. Film for 35mm sold everywhere may soon be a
thing of the past but with the resurgence of alternative processes and the
number of new users of large format photography, film in some form will be
here for a long period of time. I cannot see how the market place will drive
Nikon or Canon to create digital cameras that could compare to an 8X10 and
why most consumers would even be interested in such large files. I hope that
medium format lasts as well but not as sure of that. Digital can complete
with that format as movements and lengthy considerations of composition that
are large formats strengths are not with medium format. I would love to also
have a medium format system but with having the large format and owning an
older Rolleichord TLR I could not justify it.

My next camera will either be a better 4X5 than I now have or a digital SLR.
But I cannot see one format replacing the other. Now if digital backs for
the large format are ever economical for the masses perhaps but at ten or
twelve grand for a back that has a very high cropping factor ....




-----Original Message-----
From: William Robb [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: January 9, 2006 4:12 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Pentax lens test on DIGITAL? All Pentax DSLR same imagaing?



----- Original Message -----
From: "Gonz"
Subject: Re: Pentax lens test on DIGITAL? All Pentax DSLR same imagaing?



>> Medium format is primarily a professional photographer's camera. That
>> they are dumping the stuff in droves is not going to help the pricing of
>> it on the used market, nor is it going to do much for keeping manufacture
>> of film viable.
>> OTOH, I suspect that processing will be available for some years to come
>> yet, so if the format interests you, be aware that you may want to buy
>> enough film to keep you happy sooner rather than later.
>>
>
> And probably the chemicals for processing.  Its been a long time.  Can the
> chemicals for processing keep for a long time like film, under cold
> storage?

Chemistry, no, not really.
You can get black and white chemistry in powdered form that will last pretty
much forever, but colour chemistry does have a shelf life of a few years at
most, and can be harmed by cold storage.
I expect that film processing will be available for many more years, perhaps
as little as five, as long as ten.
If you can live with that short a time for your investment to become a
gamble on usability, definitely the quality of your photography will improve
for using the large camera.

William Robb




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