Thursday, 9 December 2010

The end of Kodachrome...

Since 1935, superb, marvellous Kodachrome has been just about the best colour transparency film available. National Geographic insisted on Kodachrome for all its colour images before the digital age. I have been shooting on it since the 1970s (now that does age me...) but knowing that the end was in sight, has meant the last couple of years has been quite a Kodachrome festival for me. I shoot 35mm Kodachrome 64, and 16mm and 8mm movie film in Kodachrome 25, and 40 types. It is lovely stuff, but has a pretty complicated processing system, for this subtractive colour film. Since the numbers of labs round the world has been falling, this had been getting more difficult, and in the last year only one lab worldwide has been able to process Kodachrome. It is Dwaynes of Parsons, Kansas, USA. Kodak, at the end of November ceased to honour the process paid 35mm K64, and it will withdraw the chemicals from Dwaynes at the end of December. Kodak apparently has no plans to sell patents for this wonderful film, or for the chemicals, so it seems to be a dead end for this lovely film. Kodak's reasons are that Kodachrome was not making sufficient profit for Kodak, and as the accountants rule everything Kodak does, it is the end for this iconic, and spectacular film. I am sad to see it go.

1 comment:

  1. 1 step forward, 2 steps back :o(

    As Paul Simon's song, 'Kodachrome' states: When I think back on all the crap I’ve learned in high school, It’s a wonder I can think at all. Though my lack of education hasn’t hurt me much, I can read the writings on the walls. Kodachrome, they give us those nice bright colours, They give us the greens of summers. Makes you think all the world’s a sunny day. Oh yeah I got a Nikon camera, I love to take a photograph, So mama don’t take my Kodachrome away. If you took all the girls I knew when I was single, brought ‘em all together for one night, I know they’d never match my sweet imagination, everything looks worse in black and white. Mama don’t take my Kodachrome away . . .
    they don't write songs like that anymore!

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