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Nikon DSLR Cameras
Film SLR's
Is Oz the canary in the coalmine for film?
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<blockquote data-quote="SamSpade1941" data-source="post: 69680" data-attributes="member: 10336"><p>Film is not dead and positives like fuji velvia are not dead. Velvia killed most of Kodaks slide film because velvia is better at rendering color. What I see dying is 35 mm which was primarily used by print journalism. Everyone else was using medium format or larger. It cost $8 to develop a roll of velvia using the pre paid mailers you purchase if you purchase them when you purchase your film from an outfit like B&H. I don't see film totally being replaced till you see a medium format digital back for less than $5000 once that happens its a very real possibility.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SamSpade1941, post: 69680, member: 10336"] Film is not dead and positives like fuji velvia are not dead. Velvia killed most of Kodaks slide film because velvia is better at rendering color. What I see dying is 35 mm which was primarily used by print journalism. Everyone else was using medium format or larger. It cost $8 to develop a roll of velvia using the pre paid mailers you purchase if you purchase them when you purchase your film from an outfit like B&H. I don't see film totally being replaced till you see a medium format digital back for less than $5000 once that happens its a very real possibility. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
Film SLR's
Is Oz the canary in the coalmine for film?
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