Tangential Ask HN: For someone looking to get into film photography for the first time, what camera would you recommend? I prefer something as mechanical as possible (less electronics the better!), but a working light meter might be helpful.
Olympus OM-1 (or OM-1n) if you can stand using silver oxide batteries for the light meter. There are many other great fully mechanical options but they can be somewhat expensive or have issues with finding lenses. The OM-2n is also great but the shutter requires a working battery and it's actually a very complex camera internally (it does real-time aperture priority metering by measuring the light reflected by the film surface while the shutter is open, if you want it to).
A Nikkormat FT3 or Nikon FM would also be good choices, but I like the compactness of the Olympus.
Yeah, watch out for battery requirements. Canon A-1, AE-1, F-1 are also reasonable choices. (Basically any FD lens system camera.) The trick is probably finding something that is in decent shape but not "collectible" shape. Looking through KEH's catalog is probably a good start.
The issue there is that the once very affordable FD lenses are now popular among filmmakers for rehousing, which makes them a lot less affordable. Pre-AI Nikon is cheaper.
I don't really follow the used market that much, but I'm thinking the is the best answer if you've got a good budget to work with and the other post saying the Pentax K1000 is better if you don't.
One potential advantage is the ability to use old Nikon lenses on newer digital cameras, but that's of limited utility when trying to use old manual focus lenses on modern bodies that aren't really designed for them.
The manual lenses are actually better on modern mirrorless cameras than on older dslr ones, because those had viewfinders that made focusing manually rather hard, while the mirrorless bodies have good focus aids.
There are many correct answers here, but I recommend the Pentax K1000. It is possibly the world's #1 most-manufactured camera, and was the standard camera for beginner photography classes throughout the 80s and 90s.
There are vendors on eBay that specialize in this camera and have literally 100s of cameras in stock.
Early models are all-metal, while later ones incorporate some plastic, but are consequently lighter. At this age, I wouldn't worry about the reliability difference of the two, and simply plan to replace the body if it fails.
The Pentax K-mount has a lot of cheap, good glass. The 50/1.8 is standard and fabulous, the 28/2.8 and 135/4 are also amazing and can be had for under $50.
The camera is entirely manual, with no autofocus or autoexposure available. Optionally, you can put a button cell battery in it to power a simple exposure meter, visible as a needle indicator in the viewfinder.
I've been shooting these for 40 years, so I'm a bit biased, but I do recommend them just for their ubiquity and cheap replaceability.
The K1000 and the Canon AE-1 are some of the only model names that people still recognize. They were both basic cameras when new. Ironically, they are now frequently more expensive than better cameras from the same makers. The name recognition has driven search.
I now recommend a Pentax MX, the same operation of a K1000 but better in every way. It was a more upscale all mechanical camera from Pentax. If you want a Canon, go for an Fb to Ftb for mechanical cameras or an A1 if you want more automated exposure options.
The best deals are probably the autofocus cameras from the 90s. With a little looking around you can probably find a Minolta XtSI with a 50mm lens for $50 or less. It is small and the lens, like all 50mm, is great. It also has a built in flash and a variety of of auto modes to simplify picture taking. Yes, they are cheap, plastic cameras that will not last a very long time. But you can get then for so cheap it doesn't really matter. The lenses tend to last longer. You can get similar deals on other brands too. Pentax autofocus cameras are super cheap but you can find Canon Rebels by the truckload as well as many Nikon (the N/F80 is my favorite plastic fantastic from them).
Literally almost any working camera will be fine, just pick one you like and have at it. As a beginner your photos aren't going to be amazing, so you won't gain much from some crazy expensive/fancy camera, nor do you even know if you'll like working with film.
You don't even need a light meter really (though they are very helpful), basic rules like sunny-16 will go along way and will help teach you how to judge exposure.
1950-60s rangefinders can be a fun place to start. They've got everything you need, nothing you don't, are full mechanical, and often very cheap.
The most important thing is to get out, learn how film behaves and to learn how to take good photos. Don't get caught in the trap a lot of beginners do worrying about gear to the point they focus on that more than actually using it.
I would recommend two cameras, both Nikon since I'm a Nikon guy since my dad handed me his F4 when I was 12 or so.
First is a FA, fully mechanical and a nice camera. Not sure about availability so.
The second, and already sporting stuff you also find on modern DSLRs, is a Nikon F4. At least over here more or less available, industructible (even half submerged in rain water pictures are great and the camera did not suffer).
Benefit of both is that they work with every F-mount lense Nikon ever made. Not sure about the latest G series without aperture rings, could be the F4 accepts those. And those lenses, if you get the good ones, all work great on Nikon's DSLRs up to the recent D780 and D850. And those lenses are available cheap used since everybody goes mirrorless. With a F4 and a decent set of lenses it is easy to go didgital on a budget, e.g. with a used good condition D700. Full format, feels a lot like a F4, both are professional bodies, and not too expensive.
Invest the difference to mirrorless into travelling to nice places where you can take nice pictures.
Oh, and using film helps improve your photography, if a picture takes time and money to develop you are much more concious about what you shoot.
Damn, now I'm motivated to break out the afore mentioned F4 again and some B+W film...
Edit: If you can get your hands on a Canon EOS1 your good too. It's Canon's F4 equivalant and Canon lenses are great. Canon does have less lens downward conpatability so. Nikon cameras are hefty, you feel what you handle, Canons are lighter and feel, well, not flimsy in comparison but you get the drift. I like hefty, solid cameras, others don't, so ouck your poison.
If you just want to try, get a good Zeiss Ikon Contina. It's the cheapest camera (20-30 dollars for a good model) of a great quality that I have. Fully mechanic, no battery.
I prefer the older TLR (twin-lens reflex) cameras — the "box cameras". They take amazing photos (I think). Most larger cities will still have a camera shop selling/processing 120 film.
(Also easy to scan the negatives on a flat-bed scanner rather than having to make prints.)
TLR's can be had fairly inexpensively on eBay (as long as you're not insisting on getting a Hassleblad or a Rollieflex, for example).
Yashica's are still affordable and take excellent photos. Most models are purely mechanical — not even an exposure meter.
I just picked up a Nikon N80 off ebay for $40. Early 2000s camera so will shoot in full auto but also manual mode. Ironically can be had cheaper than the earlier semi-auto Nikons.
There are a lot of factors to consider and also subjective preferences. But I agree that a light metre is helpful, although one should remember that you can get a stand-alone one. There are even ones that fit in the hot shoe [1]!
As for camera suggestions, this is where it gets difficult and I know that I did not find the “right” camera for me right away. Initially I shot a digital SLR for about half a decade and while I got better as a photographer, I could never love the device itself and how it “made” me shoot. Got into film with a fairly small 50s Leica that I inherited, moved its 1949 Summitar 50mm lens over to a Bessa R2 after about a year because it has a built-in light metre, had fun with an original (fairly cheap as well!) Olympus XA, and these days I can afford Zeiss glass and a Zeiss Ikon ZM to match. But it sure was a journey and I feel I became a much better digital shooter thanks to it.
So, um… Recommendations? I like small cameras – preferably rangefinders – as they are easy to carry and forces me to work within the compromises they make in terms of flexibility for a given situation. If it was ten years ago, I would have recommended any of the Bessas (produced this millennia, built like tanks, and nearly purely mechanical) with a 50mm or 35mm cheap lens, but Cosina has either stopped or lowered production to a degree where you will struggle to find one at a reasonable price these days.
If you like wide angles (I do not really, as I struggle with anything below 40mm for unknown reasons) there are plenty of fairly cheap consumer and prosumer cameras from the 80s and onward with built-in light metres. My original Olympus XA was cheap and plastic-y as all hell, but oh boy was it small and could pack a punch with some good black and white film (straight from the scanner on good old Neopan 400 [2]). Sadly, if you want a 50mm on such a camera you need to go into the 60s and 70s, where the electronics easily become a bit more iffy. If you are willing to largely forego manual focus, there is also a whole range of cameras like the Fuji Klasse W, Yashica T5, etc. Just beware that some of these goes for crazy amounts of money these days and they are of course packed with electronics.
With all my rambling, I guess in conclusion what I am trying to say is that you perhaps should consider what you already know about yourself and your shooting preferences and go for what is affordable enough to be “a toy” to play around with to get your bearings towards “the right gear”. At least that is how I finally ended up loving the process of shooting both film and digital.
A Nikon FM or FM2 for a fully mechanical camera with a light meter.
A Nikon F301 for an overlooked, very cheap but still really good camera.
The Canon A/AE-1 and Pentax K1000 get brought up a lot and are now surprisingly expensive for what they are, there are much better cameras out there for less but that don’t have their name brought up as much.
This is a huge rabbit hole to go down with how many cameras got made but if in doubt seek out someone in person and try to use one before you buy it!
Company attempts to transition customers to a proprietary product but fails.
There is a lot of upside for Kodak with this product, but not so much for the consumer, especially at the price point for the camera. Instamatic already existed and covered the same use cases. The only "problem" is that Instamatic was going off patent so anybody would be able to make the film.
I'm not sure what the sales numbers were for the 110 film Instamatics but it was also the case that anything that used film that was much less than a 35mm frame in area was fairly compromised in terms of quality--especially when combined with other camera components that were low cost.
Yeah, that was my take. Put a bunch of tiny 110 frames around in a wheel pattern and add a plastic lens (I'm guessing here) and what do you think you're going to get?
Even 35mm was marginal in quality (he says from his spoiled-by-modern-digital-photography future). I went back to film and tried a nice Nikon F3 with a great lens. Photos were okay.
Absolutely wowed though when I started experimenting with 120 (medium format) film cameras.
35mm is great up to an 8x10 print. It'll do 11x14 if you don't stand too close. It's 30mp+ of optical resolution.
The thing to remember is that at the time, nobody was scanning, they were doing optical enlargements directly onto printer paper, with 6-element macro-optimized process lenses. That's a much higher-quality optical path than you get out of almost any scanner - drum scans and high-end CCD scans (flextight or similar) can get there but even midrange CCD film scanners struggle with 35mm and your average flatbed photo scanner doesn't stand a chance.
Nowadays digital has entirely displaced this flow - even at a photo lab you will most likely get prints made from scans. And they're much lower quality than contemporary prints would have been.
If they're B+W, try wet-printing those 35mm negatives sometime. Find a local college darkroom and get someone to walk you through split-printing on variable-contrast paper on one or two of your photos. You'll see.
But yeah medium format is incredibly easy to produce usable scans, by comparison. With top-end gear you can get just as much resolution off a MF negative as 35mm - you can do optical enlargement to several feet or even a yard+ on the long edge. But it's way way easier to get something usable for a 8x10 print or something off a MF negative than it is 35mm.
35mm is great up to an 8x10 print. It'll do 11x14 if you don't stand too close. It's 30mp+ of optical resolution.
In the ideal case. Shooting 35mm is much more sensitive to higher ISO, missed exposure, incorrect development etc.
Sure perfectly exposed Velvia 50 or Kodachrome 64 developed at a professional lab which really cared about the quality and temperature of their chemicals, has really high resolution. An ISO 400 or 800 film where you missed you exposure slightly and that got developed at a crappy 1 hour photo place, will have pretty mediocre image quality.
A lot depends on ISO too of course, which is a probably underappreciated aspect of digital.
With 35mm film, you top out at about ISO 400 in B&W with standard chemistry although you can push things to about 1600 (though it shows). With color slides, the latter ISO 100 E6 films were pretty good. Grain and contrast started getting a lot worse much higher than that. Of course, Velvia 50 and Kodachrome 25 (which had about the same effective speed) were better.
> 35mm is great up to an 8x10 print. It'll do 11x14 if you don't stand too close. It's 30mp+ of optical resolution.
Sure, if you are taking photos of technical drawings or scientific specimens. For artistic purposes, the composition and subject matter much more than resolution. We were regularly blowing up 35mm to 16x20 in photo class, and I've been to photo exhibitions where images such as Steve McCurry's Afghan girl was blown up to five-foot-tall prints.
I loved 110 because of the form factor. Tiny, pocketable cameras with tiny, pocketable film. The 4x6s that came from the drug store looked like pictures to me, I never enlarged anything beyond that. I had one of the smallest cameras around and took hundreds of pictures with it.
Clearly, not a photography connoisseur, but it met my needs. Especially the later fancy models with the built in strobe flash. (Flash bars and flash cubes kind of didn't work with the form factor.)
The problem in the UK was what I call 'bang per buck'. Most magazines had envelopes fall out of them for mail order photo processing. This market was a race to the bottom, with the service becoming a commodity. To keep you coming back there would be a 'free' unexposed reel of film for every reel you sent in.
When the new disc films came along there were no upsides in area of film exposed, there was no upgrade path (you could not use the same film in an SLR as a point and shoot fixed focus) and only photographers that worked commercially were in the market for buying film. Most people went for the mail order option or Boots The Chemist, found on every High Street and able to do a quick turnaround at a fair price.
The 1980's were also quite expensive when it came to consumer items. We no longer buy cameras 'made in America' and the thought of it is quite unimaginable today, you know straight off the bat that you are not going to be able to afford it. Furthermore, nothing in store was on a 'point of sale' system with retailers knowing exactly how much stock they have. There have been vast efficiency changes over the last forty years. All of this factors into price.
On the flip side, the boomers were relatively rich and the difference between rich and poor was not what it is today, hence there was a large customer base in the middle class that could afford these things.
We had one of these when I was a kid... took it on holiday to Maui one winter. Super fun and easy to carry around everywhere. Only problem was, photos were absolutely terrible. Grain was incredibly large, no detail. I guess because the actual negative was so small. Never used it again.
Story I've shared on HN in the past. In the summer of '83, I did an internship at Kodak. I worked at the Elmgrove facility where the disc cameras were made. Early in my stint, I got a plant tour of the building where those cameras were made. The factory was going full bore to keep up with demand. I was in awe of the factory and the level of automation and the sheer size of the machines!
There were 18,000 people at that one Kodak facility. Start and end time were staggered in five minute increments to manage car flow. To think at the time that just five years later it would all come to a rather quick end was unthinkable.
Certainly there was resistance to digital photography within Kodak. But they did some work with digital very early on and PhotoCD was another effort to get into the transition from film to digital. In any case, the early 80s was way too early for consumer digital photography to be practical.
But what would Kodak really have brought to digital--especially at the scale to replace their consumables business? After all, Kodak once owned a full chemical company (that they spun off at some point) to provide them with their chemical needs. They didn't have much in the way of semiconductor expertise. Their network of dealers could have (and actually did) provide some ability for consumers to print digital photos early on. It's not like Kodak was making anything other than cameras like this when digital came in.
Fujifilm did better with the transition to digital by leveraging their emulsion and chemical expertise. But they still had a rough time of it and were a much smaller company.
The point is that Kodak was so huge and had such a big head start it didn't matter that they had no direct experience with semiconductors.
Decision makers at kodak should have been able to leverage their considerable resources to gain market share with the new technology that would eventually replace their main product.
All things considered, they did a pretty good job of scaling down and staying alive. But it's a classic example of "My salary depends on not understanding it"
Kodak could have gone into any arbitrary new manufacturing business. Heck, they could have invented the smartphone. But besides smartphones, digital photography is not a particularly good business to be in.
True this is essentially just saying "they could have diversified" but my main point is that they should have diversified into the up-and-coming field where they could claim some expertise.
Someone uses precise complicated chemical manufacturing processes that require a deep understanding of color science to produce the millions of sensors in phones, cars, cameras, doorbells, etc. And it's not Kodak.
They do (and always have done) a lot with chemicals and emulsions only some of which is imaging-related. They also did copiers for a time--which I believe they got out of although they do still have a commercial printing business. I think they also had a healthcare initiative of some sort at one point but they seem to be out of that as well.
this is, I think, the money shot to my lengthy ramble elsewhere. Digital photography is not a particularly good business to be in, and Kodak had nothing left once you stripped away the film business and the ancillary photopaper/chemical business.
If you're going to do it, you want to be in the pro market, you want to be selling the body, you want an extensive first-party library and, ideally, minimal competition from external third-parties (Sigma, Tamron, etc) selling into your system.
Kodak had none of that, their only DSLR experience was building "digital conversions" of Nikon bodies (using nikon lenses) and they would have been starting from scratch.
Fuji also got really lucky that Japan fucking loves cameras, especially film cameras. Fuji has NEVER given a shit about the world outside japan, other than selling freighter-loads of color negative film (disposable cameras are still extremely popular in the developing world), they give zero shits about marketing their cameras or instant film or anything else outside the Japanese market. Their camera gear (35mm, MF, and LF) has always been top-notch and it just has zero market penetration in the US because they never bothered to market it. It's also routine to have fuji stuff (Astia, FP-100C45, FP-100C, etc) discontinued with like a week of notice to japan, and zero notice to the rest of the world, they have extremely poor organizational communication because they only give a shit about japan. But they never had to, because Japan has had a love affair with photography for 70 years now.
When you look at cameras like the Fuji X-series... those are cameras designed for the Japanese domestic market, cause they still love rangefinders. So is the Pentax Q series... americans don't get it, shitty p+s sensor, why would I buy it? you're not meant to, it's a cute little camera for japanese housewives, they just let us buy it too... sometimes.
I admit to really liking the X-E3--though the X-E4 wasn't obviously an upgrade. But I might just have stuck with Canon (I have a 5Diii) if I were going mirrorless today.
Fuji (although later getting into the X series), did pretty much what Kodak eventually did--mostly applying emulsion and chemical expertise in addition to legacy pro film business plus commercial printing--but, as you say, much smaller and much more insular.
As I've written about in the past, Kodak gets held up as a classic example of "marketing myopia"--see any Marketing 101 textbook. But, for the reasons you cite, Kodak should just have pivoted harder into digital doesn't really hold up.
The insularity of the Japanese market extends to lots of things.
I used to be an IT industry analyst and, while they were never a particular focus, I did follow what NEC, Fujitsu, and Hitachi did in the server market. My general observation was that they all had aspirations to be global IT suppliers but, for the most part, they didn't want to make any material investments to make that actually happen.
PhotoCD seemed like a pretty half-assed effort and there wasn't really a market for it. There were PhotoCD players but no one really wanted to view their images on a TV. So great, you've digitized your photo, now what? People just weren't sharing their images digitally yet. But anyway, my dad tried to sell them in his shop, and I transferred 100 of my favorite images at the time to PhotoCD in 1993. Here's a few:
I got a few PhotoCDs made when I first got a CD drive for my computer. PhotoCDs probably came from a place where the TV was a central fixture in many households and it probably seemed like a logical extension to how many people would have slideshows of their holiday slides. I think there was a certain baked-in assumption by Kodak and others that the digitization of photography would still look a lot like how photographs were taken and shared in the film world.
> How many people would have slideshows of their holiday slides.
I have suffered through more than my fair share of those.
> I think there was a certain baked-in assumption by Kodak and others that the digitization of photography would still look a lot like how photographs were taken and shared in the film world.
I don't have any hard numbers, but at my dad's shop we probably sold and developed 95%+ negatives vs slides. We did so little E6 (much less Kodachrome) that we didn't even bother with it in-house. Most photos were shot on negative and shared as prints, not shot on slide and shared as slide shows. So if PhotoCD was supposed to take the place of a slide projector, it was already a losing proposition.
To this day, I have my favorite digital photos printed, as do my family members. There's something more intimate about passing around a photo album than sitting in front of a display.
I think PhotoCD was one of those things that was too early since there wasn't demand for sharing digitally yet, and then too late once digital cameras came out and made digitizing film unnecessary.
Slides were definitely for more serious photographers many of whom mail ordered film and sent it off to Kodak or someone else for processing--though I'm sure it was still a distinct minority of film sold. One of my rituals when taking a vacation where I'd be doing a lot of photography was to place an order with B&H (via phone) for 20 or however many rolls of Ektachrome and Kodachrome.
You might want to contact SalmonSnail [1]. They've been digitizing a massive amount of lost / forgotten 35mm slides, and uploading them to their Flickr account [2].
Photo CD made a lot of sense for small-time pre-press desktop publishing. The images were well scanned at high resolution at a time when desktop scanners were finicky SCSI devices that took a long time for a mediocre scan. If you were not developing your film yourself, you could do worse than to just have the lab scan the negatives for you, and indeed this is how I use my film camera for the most part, enlarging only the images I like.
There's something surreal about how I was just casually perusing the internet today and came across a random sampling of the earliest photos to exist in the digital medium, and see that the scenes captured within them are just barely contemporaneous with my own existence.
I was under the impression that Kodak more or less invented the digital camera and then sat on it. Digital cameras never offered the kind of recurring revenue of film, paper, and chemistry and really only had about a decade as a consumer product before phones replaced them as far as I can tell. It's hard to imagine Kodak ever really making it through that.
Yeah. Imagine Kodak came out with a good mass market digital camera as soon as it was feasible to do so--so sometime in the late 90s. There's no particular reason they could have accelerated the development compared to all the other companies designing digital cameras. And as you say, it was only about 10 years until the smartphone came out. Beating Nikon and Canon at their own came would have been a big change in strategy and they've been shrinking in any case.
Probably. They invented the digital camera for the KEYHOLE/KENNEN/CRYSTAL satellite series in the 70s, there’s undoubtedly some patents that came with it.
But, what would you have even done with a digital image in 1975? Showed it around the family Christmas party on your laptop? About 20 years too early for that.
Even in 1991 when they got serious about professional digital imaging, a DSLR came with a little suitcase attached with electronics and storage and batteries. Even in the professional market there was no interest in a shitty 1.3 megapixel image when a film camera was shooting the equivalent of a 30-40 megapixel image (using optical enlargement not scanning), nobody would want to take that kind of hit unless you needed images right now, ie news crews and military. They sold less than 1k units, at a cost of $20k per unit (in 1991 dollars!).
By the time the market was ready for consumer digital cameras, in the late 90s/early 2000s, they did indeed explore that market (eg DC 210 point-and-shoot), and it was already a low-margin market and becoming lower all the time. That market instantly became a race to the bottom and by about 2004 it was already completely commoditized. I remember the Canon A40 being hot shit for a point and shoot, a couple gens later and it was just the same design rehashed over and over again, undoubtedly with margins getting thinner every time around. Look at the full Canon model list and you can see by the time the A410 comes out (around 2004-2005) the models stop because the market is just dead.
“Kodak should have done more with digital!” is a super easy thing to say, but, what specifically should they have done that they didn’t already do, and when should they have done it?
It does seem like they could have done more, or marketed better, or something, but it’s not as obvious as people think it is. It might be instructive to look at the efforts of Nikon or Minolta (eg the RD-175) by comparison and nobody else was doing significantly better than that. That was 1995, four years after Kodak went to market with their first commercial DSLR for the pro market, and four years before Kodak got serious about consumer cameras.
The only real answer I can think of is that they should have gone harder in this market - the pro market where the margins were better. But Kodak was never Nikon, they had some high-end models in the 40s and 50s (Kodak Medalist, Retina series, Ektra series, and their pro MF/LF lens line) but they pretty much exited the pro market by the mid 50s, and that was before SLRs really took off. They were a consumer comp...
It's certainly easy to say what they could or should have done with hindsight. But I think most people would agree that Kodak was in a strong position entering the digital revolution. Instead of ending up with a piece of the pie they are left basically just producing a niche luxury product and licensing out their brand name for white-labeled garbage.
Also they were always 8% behind the market because they were running on Cotsworth's 13-month International Fixed Calendar.
Mostly joking, but it does suggest a pretty isolated internal company culture... they planned projects and billed based on different months than the entire rest of the world. Wild.
I had a Kodak DC260 - not quite 2 megapixels resolution, but had optical zoom with autofocus, used a compact flash card for storage, and ate AA batteries like they were candy. Connectivity was USB, IrDA (infrared), and analog video (NTSC/PAL).
What many people didn't know is that it came with several SDKs. 1) It had a scripting language that ran on the camera, 2) Visual Basic 4 or 5, and 3) VBA for Office applications, so you could do something like automate employee ID badge creation.
Honestly, I don't know what they could have done to make up the loss of recurring consumable revenue in the digital world beyond what they already did with Kodak branded photo paper, Kodak branded memory cards, and Kodak branded accessories like lanyards and bags.
My first digital camera was a Kodak. Purchased around '97(?) for the princely sum of $1000. It was 1.1Mp IIRC and took excellent photos for the time. It also consumed AA batteries with the same alacrity that its ancestors consumed film.
In that timeline Kodak makes an unbelievably massive pivot from being a chemical company to being a digital camera company, dominate throughout the 90s and into the 2000s, and then get absolutely smashed by Apple in the 2010s.
I had one of these Disc cameras as a kid. I am really thankful for it, not because I have a single photo from that period, but because it was a direct and very educational example of marketing. I credit the Kodak Disc Camera with teaching me not to be so easily manipulated by marketing, a lesson that has served me very well.
I was there in the early 2000s when the building was being cleaned out to create office spaces. I distinctly remember a hallway filled with teletypes headed out for scrap/salvage.
Different technology, but Destin from Smarter every day did an interesting factory tour [1] of their film making process. Despite the factory being fairy old, there's an impressive level of engineering, automation and other tech involved. Things like their film coating machines having an isolated, heavy floor that's directly connected to bedrock, miles of drying machines that never physically touch the film, or the giant screw used to generate heat by friction to create the film base.
The amount of process and technical knowledge and experience that went into this is absolutely impressive.
Slightly unrelated, but early in my career I brushed off those tours as not really useful for my developer job. Mostly because I got indoctrinated by my computer science profs that it's all data flow in the end. Don't concentrate on what's behind. Even though I still think it is to some extend true to remind yourself to abstract away the meaning for the business, the real reason for those tours are so different: They are memories for life. This is how you become a fully formed human in our society. One of the perks of being a tech consultant was really to get to know so many different life worlds of people working in different sectors.
One of my early jobs was as a consultant in a early software company which had great traction in data visualization. I worked on dozens of projects over a five year period, and got to go see some utterly amazing things on-site in military, space, shipping, manufacturing, nuclear, etc. industries.
Good advice for the next generation is to take every opportunity to go see the physical plan where things really happen.
> The Kodak Disc camera was introduced with great fanfare in 1982. The new cameras were lightweight, foolproof (with auto-exposure and built-in flash), affordable, and used a brand new kind of film cartridge.
My dad owned a darkroom/photoshop/one-hour lab for about 30 years starting in the 70s. I worked for him for about 5 of those years centered around highschool.
There is absolutely no such thing as a foolproof camera. You would not believe all the ways people can screw up even the most "foolproof" of designs.
As just one example: with a traditional 35 mm camera, the film unspools from its lightproof cartridge onto a take-up spool in the camera. When you reach the end of of the roll, you press a button on the camera to release a clutch, then you turn a knob to rewind the film back into its cartridge before opening the camera back and removing the film.
One obvious and easy to make error is accidentally opening the camera back before rewinding the film, usually ruining ("fogging") all the pictures you shot. :-(
But what you wouldn't guess someone would be able to do is to rewind the film without releasing the clutch. Doing so requires a large amount of force because you're tearing the sprockets off the side of the film where it travels over the gear that's normally used to advance the film.
Any yet, this is something I saw more than one time. Customers would never admit to doing this, but I mean, come on, we'd open the cartridge to remove the film for development and the sides would have been torn off and there's only one way this happens.
Then there's the questions... no, dropping the exposed film did not blur the images.
Mostly people take mundane, boring and poorly shot photos. When they go on vacation they take pictures of the same landmarks and in the same ways. I probably printed[1] the Leaning Tower of Pisa approximately 8 million times. Everyone thinks they are clever posing so that it appears they are holding it in the palm of their hand. And while people also take pictures of other people naked, those also tend to be mundane, boring, and poorly shot. So yes, I printed nudes, but rarely were they notable enough to cause me to raise my eyebrow at them. I don't recall ever printing photos of criminal behavior.
[1] The one-hour lab equipment we had was semi-automated. The printing machine was about the size of three refrigerators side-by-side. There was a console/desk at one end that I would sit at which had the projection bulb underneath shining up through a small hole over which I'd place each negative one after the next.
The machine had a computer which assumed the colors and exposure in each photo averaged out to an 18% grey image. Looking at the negative, I'd have to punch in offsets: e.g. I'd recognize the image has a lot of sky, or a lot of green foliage, or it's at the beach, etc, or it was over or under exposed, so I'd add "+3 blue" or '+2 green", or whatever I thought was needed to offset from 18% grey, then punch "go". The machine would then expose the negative onto the photo paper above which was on a 4" wide by 1000 foot roll. So it would expose 4" x 6" above, then it would feed the exposed paper into tanks filled with the chemistry to develop the paper. About 12 minutes later (as I recall...) the photos I'd previously exposed would pop out of the machine.
Another employee, or me if it wasn't too busy, would then do quality control. I was pretty good, but some photos I would have misidentified so we'd have to sometimes re-print a few. After we were satisfied with the quality, the photos would all go into a paper envelope and we'd cut the negative roll down from 12, 24, or 36 images into strips of 4 images. Those would go into plastic sleeves and get inserted into the same paper envelope with the photos.
I never really thought about it before, but I guess I've traveled vicariously all over the world through other people's photos. I don't think we ever thought twice about privacy and I don't think our customers did then either. Occasionally someone might mention there were nudes when dropping off a roll, but mostly not.
I vaguely recall we had a customer with a mistress and he would use a different name when dropping off photos that included the mistress because his wife would sometimes come in to pick up the family photos. Okay, one more: a guy who had a new girlfriend every few months and somehow he'd always get his girlfriends to flash the camera. It was amusing because we'd see he had a new girlfriend and knew it would be just a few weeks before he'd have a photo of her flashing her breasts for him. It's been more than 30 years, but those are two I recall.
As a kid I took apart those old disposable cameras. That's when I had my first, but far from my last, bittersweet kiss with mother electricity. For better or worse, I soon convinced everyone (kids and adults alike) to commit wholeheartedly the folly of shaking hands with a charged flash capacitor. Thus they all became well acquainted with the finicky mistress of electrical discharge.
Oh right, that machine was supposed to produce photos. You mean I wasn't supposed to open that? Well jokes on you. 7 year olds can't read won't read and won't listen either. Oops.
I had one of these as a kid. I think it was the basic 3100 with the gold front.
From memory the major problem for me was not the picture quality or an lack of features on the camera. It was the cost of film, developing and that it only had a few exposures per disk.
It was just too expensive to run compared to a 35mm camera. A few years later the disposable 35mm cameras came out and that just killed it completely.
Our family camera was a Kodak Disc Camera. The crappy grainy quality was offset by the speed and convenience of swapping discs. Lots of family moments would have been forgotten, so the trade-off was worth it.
Only problem was price (more expensive to buy and process), and availability (hard to find disc film in a country town).
Strange how, having become curator for the family photos going back many generations, I have seen the quality of the photos fall off over the decades. Peak home-photography appears to be around the 1930's or 1940s. Photos get worse when color comes along, worse still when Polaroids came along.
Growing up we had the Kodak Instamatics — perhaps the worst of the lot?
Ah! I read it as disk camera, and thought Kodak had cameras with hard disks for storage. For a brief time in the 2000s that may not have been such a bad idea.
I had a few disc cameras in the 80s. My mother bought them for me because they were cheap and easy to use.
It was a great concept in theory, but as the articles states the picture quality was terrible. Every picture I took was a little bit blurry with over exposed colours and that was after taking them to a processor who had the right equipment. I also tried various different brands and qualities of film, all with the same result.
I have about 80 disc negatives in a cupboard somewhere. I wanted to scan them to JPG, but I couldn't find a DIY scanner that accepts the format without having to cut the frames from the disc and put them in to a 35mm slide mount. There are a few companies that have the means to scan them, but they are pricey - I was quoted €30.00 to scan one disc.
I feel that if Kodak had waited a few years and did a bit more work to increase the formats resolution it might have been more of a success. The small size of disc cameras were their biggest selling point, but that counted for nothing when the image quality was so poor.
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 157 ms ] threadA Nikkormat FT3 or Nikon FM would also be good choices, but I like the compactness of the Olympus.
No it’s not! Pre-Ai Nikon lenses are also made out of toxic metal that will break modern cameras!
One potential advantage is the ability to use old Nikon lenses on newer digital cameras, but that's of limited utility when trying to use old manual focus lenses on modern bodies that aren't really designed for them.
There are vendors on eBay that specialize in this camera and have literally 100s of cameras in stock.
Early models are all-metal, while later ones incorporate some plastic, but are consequently lighter. At this age, I wouldn't worry about the reliability difference of the two, and simply plan to replace the body if it fails.
The Pentax K-mount has a lot of cheap, good glass. The 50/1.8 is standard and fabulous, the 28/2.8 and 135/4 are also amazing and can be had for under $50.
The camera is entirely manual, with no autofocus or autoexposure available. Optionally, you can put a button cell battery in it to power a simple exposure meter, visible as a needle indicator in the viewfinder.
I've been shooting these for 40 years, so I'm a bit biased, but I do recommend them just for their ubiquity and cheap replaceability.
I now recommend a Pentax MX, the same operation of a K1000 but better in every way. It was a more upscale all mechanical camera from Pentax. If you want a Canon, go for an Fb to Ftb for mechanical cameras or an A1 if you want more automated exposure options.
The best deals are probably the autofocus cameras from the 90s. With a little looking around you can probably find a Minolta XtSI with a 50mm lens for $50 or less. It is small and the lens, like all 50mm, is great. It also has a built in flash and a variety of of auto modes to simplify picture taking. Yes, they are cheap, plastic cameras that will not last a very long time. But you can get then for so cheap it doesn't really matter. The lenses tend to last longer. You can get similar deals on other brands too. Pentax autofocus cameras are super cheap but you can find Canon Rebels by the truckload as well as many Nikon (the N/F80 is my favorite plastic fantastic from them).
You don't even need a light meter really (though they are very helpful), basic rules like sunny-16 will go along way and will help teach you how to judge exposure.
1950-60s rangefinders can be a fun place to start. They've got everything you need, nothing you don't, are full mechanical, and often very cheap.
The most important thing is to get out, learn how film behaves and to learn how to take good photos. Don't get caught in the trap a lot of beginners do worrying about gear to the point they focus on that more than actually using it.
First is a FA, fully mechanical and a nice camera. Not sure about availability so.
The second, and already sporting stuff you also find on modern DSLRs, is a Nikon F4. At least over here more or less available, industructible (even half submerged in rain water pictures are great and the camera did not suffer).
Benefit of both is that they work with every F-mount lense Nikon ever made. Not sure about the latest G series without aperture rings, could be the F4 accepts those. And those lenses, if you get the good ones, all work great on Nikon's DSLRs up to the recent D780 and D850. And those lenses are available cheap used since everybody goes mirrorless. With a F4 and a decent set of lenses it is easy to go didgital on a budget, e.g. with a used good condition D700. Full format, feels a lot like a F4, both are professional bodies, and not too expensive.
Invest the difference to mirrorless into travelling to nice places where you can take nice pictures.
Oh, and using film helps improve your photography, if a picture takes time and money to develop you are much more concious about what you shoot.
Damn, now I'm motivated to break out the afore mentioned F4 again and some B+W film...
Edit: If you can get your hands on a Canon EOS1 your good too. It's Canon's F4 equivalant and Canon lenses are great. Canon does have less lens downward conpatability so. Nikon cameras are hefty, you feel what you handle, Canons are lighter and feel, well, not flimsy in comparison but you get the drift. I like hefty, solid cameras, others don't, so ouck your poison.
(Also easy to scan the negatives on a flat-bed scanner rather than having to make prints.)
TLR's can be had fairly inexpensively on eBay (as long as you're not insisting on getting a Hassleblad or a Rollieflex, for example).
Yashica's are still affordable and take excellent photos. Most models are purely mechanical — not even an exposure meter.
https://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_from=R40&_trksid=p2380057.m...
[1]: https://cameraquest.com/voivcmet2.htm
As for camera suggestions, this is where it gets difficult and I know that I did not find the “right” camera for me right away. Initially I shot a digital SLR for about half a decade and while I got better as a photographer, I could never love the device itself and how it “made” me shoot. Got into film with a fairly small 50s Leica that I inherited, moved its 1949 Summitar 50mm lens over to a Bessa R2 after about a year because it has a built-in light metre, had fun with an original (fairly cheap as well!) Olympus XA, and these days I can afford Zeiss glass and a Zeiss Ikon ZM to match. But it sure was a journey and I feel I became a much better digital shooter thanks to it.
So, um… Recommendations? I like small cameras – preferably rangefinders – as they are easy to carry and forces me to work within the compromises they make in terms of flexibility for a given situation. If it was ten years ago, I would have recommended any of the Bessas (produced this millennia, built like tanks, and nearly purely mechanical) with a 50mm or 35mm cheap lens, but Cosina has either stopped or lowered production to a degree where you will struggle to find one at a reasonable price these days.
If you like wide angles (I do not really, as I struggle with anything below 40mm for unknown reasons) there are plenty of fairly cheap consumer and prosumer cameras from the 80s and onward with built-in light metres. My original Olympus XA was cheap and plastic-y as all hell, but oh boy was it small and could pack a punch with some good black and white film (straight from the scanner on good old Neopan 400 [2]). Sadly, if you want a 50mm on such a camera you need to go into the 60s and 70s, where the electronics easily become a bit more iffy. If you are willing to largely forego manual focus, there is also a whole range of cameras like the Fuji Klasse W, Yashica T5, etc. Just beware that some of these goes for crazy amounts of money these days and they are of course packed with electronics.
[2]: https://0x0.st/opC5.jpg
With all my rambling, I guess in conclusion what I am trying to say is that you perhaps should consider what you already know about yourself and your shooting preferences and go for what is affordable enough to be “a toy” to play around with to get your bearings towards “the right gear”. At least that is how I finally ended up loving the process of shooting both film and digital.
A Nikon FM or FM2 for a fully mechanical camera with a light meter.
A Nikon F301 for an overlooked, very cheap but still really good camera.
The Canon A/AE-1 and Pentax K1000 get brought up a lot and are now surprisingly expensive for what they are, there are much better cameras out there for less but that don’t have their name brought up as much.
This is a huge rabbit hole to go down with how many cameras got made but if in doubt seek out someone in person and try to use one before you buy it!
There is a lot of upside for Kodak with this product, but not so much for the consumer, especially at the price point for the camera. Instamatic already existed and covered the same use cases. The only "problem" is that Instamatic was going off patent so anybody would be able to make the film.
Even 35mm was marginal in quality (he says from his spoiled-by-modern-digital-photography future). I went back to film and tried a nice Nikon F3 with a great lens. Photos were okay.
Absolutely wowed though when I started experimenting with 120 (medium format) film cameras.
35mm is great up to an 8x10 print. It'll do 11x14 if you don't stand too close. It's 30mp+ of optical resolution.
The thing to remember is that at the time, nobody was scanning, they were doing optical enlargements directly onto printer paper, with 6-element macro-optimized process lenses. That's a much higher-quality optical path than you get out of almost any scanner - drum scans and high-end CCD scans (flextight or similar) can get there but even midrange CCD film scanners struggle with 35mm and your average flatbed photo scanner doesn't stand a chance.
Nowadays digital has entirely displaced this flow - even at a photo lab you will most likely get prints made from scans. And they're much lower quality than contemporary prints would have been.
If they're B+W, try wet-printing those 35mm negatives sometime. Find a local college darkroom and get someone to walk you through split-printing on variable-contrast paper on one or two of your photos. You'll see.
https://www.guidetofilmphotography.com/split-filter-printing...
https://www.35mmc.com/27/04/2020/split-grade-printing-darkro...
But yeah medium format is incredibly easy to produce usable scans, by comparison. With top-end gear you can get just as much resolution off a MF negative as 35mm - you can do optical enlargement to several feet or even a yard+ on the long edge. But it's way way easier to get something usable for a 8x10 print or something off a MF negative than it is 35mm.
That's crazy. I think I will try a darkroom again. It has been 45 years...
In the ideal case. Shooting 35mm is much more sensitive to higher ISO, missed exposure, incorrect development etc.
Sure perfectly exposed Velvia 50 or Kodachrome 64 developed at a professional lab which really cared about the quality and temperature of their chemicals, has really high resolution. An ISO 400 or 800 film where you missed you exposure slightly and that got developed at a crappy 1 hour photo place, will have pretty mediocre image quality.
With 35mm film, you top out at about ISO 400 in B&W with standard chemistry although you can push things to about 1600 (though it shows). With color slides, the latter ISO 100 E6 films were pretty good. Grain and contrast started getting a lot worse much higher than that. Of course, Velvia 50 and Kodachrome 25 (which had about the same effective speed) were better.
Sure, if you are taking photos of technical drawings or scientific specimens. For artistic purposes, the composition and subject matter much more than resolution. We were regularly blowing up 35mm to 16x20 in photo class, and I've been to photo exhibitions where images such as Steve McCurry's Afghan girl was blown up to five-foot-tall prints.
I loved 110 because of the form factor. Tiny, pocketable cameras with tiny, pocketable film. The 4x6s that came from the drug store looked like pictures to me, I never enlarged anything beyond that. I had one of the smallest cameras around and took hundreds of pictures with it.
Clearly, not a photography connoisseur, but it met my needs. Especially the later fancy models with the built in strobe flash. (Flash bars and flash cubes kind of didn't work with the form factor.)
When the new disc films came along there were no upsides in area of film exposed, there was no upgrade path (you could not use the same film in an SLR as a point and shoot fixed focus) and only photographers that worked commercially were in the market for buying film. Most people went for the mail order option or Boots The Chemist, found on every High Street and able to do a quick turnaround at a fair price.
The 1980's were also quite expensive when it came to consumer items. We no longer buy cameras 'made in America' and the thought of it is quite unimaginable today, you know straight off the bat that you are not going to be able to afford it. Furthermore, nothing in store was on a 'point of sale' system with retailers knowing exactly how much stock they have. There have been vast efficiency changes over the last forty years. All of this factors into price.
On the flip side, the boomers were relatively rich and the difference between rich and poor was not what it is today, hence there was a large customer base in the middle class that could afford these things.
But smaller file meant worse quality than 35mm.
The name “APS” lived on when camera manufacturers used smaller sensors on cameras designed for full frame lenses.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Photo_System
I worked in a one-hour photo lab. Disc photos always looked like crap. If you couldn't get a decent photo with the light in Maui, there was no hope.
There were 18,000 people at that one Kodak facility. Start and end time were staggered in five minute increments to manage car flow. To think at the time that just five years later it would all come to a rather quick end was unthinkable.
But what would Kodak really have brought to digital--especially at the scale to replace their consumables business? After all, Kodak once owned a full chemical company (that they spun off at some point) to provide them with their chemical needs. They didn't have much in the way of semiconductor expertise. Their network of dealers could have (and actually did) provide some ability for consumers to print digital photos early on. It's not like Kodak was making anything other than cameras like this when digital came in.
Fujifilm did better with the transition to digital by leveraging their emulsion and chemical expertise. But they still had a rough time of it and were a much smaller company.
Decision makers at kodak should have been able to leverage their considerable resources to gain market share with the new technology that would eventually replace their main product.
All things considered, they did a pretty good job of scaling down and staying alive. But it's a classic example of "My salary depends on not understanding it"
Someone uses precise complicated chemical manufacturing processes that require a deep understanding of color science to produce the millions of sensors in phones, cars, cameras, doorbells, etc. And it's not Kodak.
If you're going to do it, you want to be in the pro market, you want to be selling the body, you want an extensive first-party library and, ideally, minimal competition from external third-parties (Sigma, Tamron, etc) selling into your system.
Kodak had none of that, their only DSLR experience was building "digital conversions" of Nikon bodies (using nikon lenses) and they would have been starting from scratch.
Fuji also got really lucky that Japan fucking loves cameras, especially film cameras. Fuji has NEVER given a shit about the world outside japan, other than selling freighter-loads of color negative film (disposable cameras are still extremely popular in the developing world), they give zero shits about marketing their cameras or instant film or anything else outside the Japanese market. Their camera gear (35mm, MF, and LF) has always been top-notch and it just has zero market penetration in the US because they never bothered to market it. It's also routine to have fuji stuff (Astia, FP-100C45, FP-100C, etc) discontinued with like a week of notice to japan, and zero notice to the rest of the world, they have extremely poor organizational communication because they only give a shit about japan. But they never had to, because Japan has had a love affair with photography for 70 years now.
When you look at cameras like the Fuji X-series... those are cameras designed for the Japanese domestic market, cause they still love rangefinders. So is the Pentax Q series... americans don't get it, shitty p+s sensor, why would I buy it? you're not meant to, it's a cute little camera for japanese housewives, they just let us buy it too... sometimes.
Fuji (although later getting into the X series), did pretty much what Kodak eventually did--mostly applying emulsion and chemical expertise in addition to legacy pro film business plus commercial printing--but, as you say, much smaller and much more insular.
As I've written about in the past, Kodak gets held up as a classic example of "marketing myopia"--see any Marketing 101 textbook. But, for the reasons you cite, Kodak should just have pivoted harder into digital doesn't really hold up.
I used to be an IT industry analyst and, while they were never a particular focus, I did follow what NEC, Fujitsu, and Hitachi did in the server market. My general observation was that they all had aspirations to be global IT suppliers but, for the most part, they didn't want to make any material investments to make that actually happen.
https://i.ibb.co/bPPgvBN/Photo-37-of-100.jpg
https://i.ibb.co/G5r08cY/Photo-50-of-100.jpg
https://i.ibb.co/X2nPJgT/Photo-74-of-100.jpg
https://i.ibb.co/n1pTKC8/Photo-92-of-100.jpg
Probably shot on Kodak Gold 100 color negative with a Nikon FE2. Gosh I suddenly miss the smell of film.
I have suffered through more than my fair share of those.
> I think there was a certain baked-in assumption by Kodak and others that the digitization of photography would still look a lot like how photographs were taken and shared in the film world.
I don't have any hard numbers, but at my dad's shop we probably sold and developed 95%+ negatives vs slides. We did so little E6 (much less Kodachrome) that we didn't even bother with it in-house. Most photos were shot on negative and shared as prints, not shot on slide and shared as slide shows. So if PhotoCD was supposed to take the place of a slide projector, it was already a losing proposition.
To this day, I have my favorite digital photos printed, as do my family members. There's something more intimate about passing around a photo album than sitting in front of a display.
I think PhotoCD was one of those things that was too early since there wasn't demand for sharing digitally yet, and then too late once digital cameras came out and made digitizing film unnecessary.
I actually wrote an article for CNET when Kodachrome processing was eventually shut down. https://www.cnet.com/tech/tech-industry/countdown-to-kodachr...
[1] https://www.timewormarchive.com/contact
[2] https://www.flickr.com/photos/salmonsnail/albums
At the time, usable digital cameras looked like the Kodak F3 back plus shoulder-mounted hard drive in this article: https://www.businessinsider.com/digital-photography-revoluti...
Didn't they hold some early key patents?
Probably. They invented the digital camera for the KEYHOLE/KENNEN/CRYSTAL satellite series in the 70s, there’s undoubtedly some patents that came with it.
But, what would you have even done with a digital image in 1975? Showed it around the family Christmas party on your laptop? About 20 years too early for that.
Even in 1991 when they got serious about professional digital imaging, a DSLR came with a little suitcase attached with electronics and storage and batteries. Even in the professional market there was no interest in a shitty 1.3 megapixel image when a film camera was shooting the equivalent of a 30-40 megapixel image (using optical enlargement not scanning), nobody would want to take that kind of hit unless you needed images right now, ie news crews and military. They sold less than 1k units, at a cost of $20k per unit (in 1991 dollars!).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kodak_DCS_100
By the time the market was ready for consumer digital cameras, in the late 90s/early 2000s, they did indeed explore that market (eg DC 210 point-and-shoot), and it was already a low-margin market and becoming lower all the time. That market instantly became a race to the bottom and by about 2004 it was already completely commoditized. I remember the Canon A40 being hot shit for a point and shoot, a couple gens later and it was just the same design rehashed over and over again, undoubtedly with margins getting thinner every time around. Look at the full Canon model list and you can see by the time the A410 comes out (around 2004-2005) the models stop because the market is just dead.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kodak_DC_Series
https://www.imaging-resource.com/PRODS/DC210/DC210Acgi.HTM
https://www.imaging-resource.com/PRODS/DC240/DC240A.HTM
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canon_PowerShot_A#Models
https://www.imaging-resource.com/PRODS/A40/A40A.HTM
“Kodak should have done more with digital!” is a super easy thing to say, but, what specifically should they have done that they didn’t already do, and when should they have done it?
It does seem like they could have done more, or marketed better, or something, but it’s not as obvious as people think it is. It might be instructive to look at the efforts of Nikon or Minolta (eg the RD-175) by comparison and nobody else was doing significantly better than that. That was 1995, four years after Kodak went to market with their first commercial DSLR for the pro market, and four years before Kodak got serious about consumer cameras.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minolta_RD-175
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikon_E_series
The only real answer I can think of is that they should have gone harder in this market - the pro market where the margins were better. But Kodak was never Nikon, they had some high-end models in the 40s and 50s (Kodak Medalist, Retina series, Ektra series, and their pro MF/LF lens line) but they pretty much exited the pro market by the mid 50s, and that was before SLRs really took off. They were a consumer comp...
What laptop? What home computer? :-)
Mostly joking, but it does suggest a pretty isolated internal company culture... they planned projects and billed based on different months than the entire rest of the world. Wild.
What many people didn't know is that it came with several SDKs. 1) It had a scripting language that ran on the camera, 2) Visual Basic 4 or 5, and 3) VBA for Office applications, so you could do something like automate employee ID badge creation.
Honestly, I don't know what they could have done to make up the loss of recurring consumable revenue in the digital world beyond what they already did with Kodak branded photo paper, Kodak branded memory cards, and Kodak branded accessories like lanyards and bags.
The amount of process and technical knowledge and experience that went into this is absolutely impressive.
[1] https://youtu.be/HQKy1KJpSVc
What do you think led to such a quick end?
Good advice for the next generation is to take every opportunity to go see the physical plan where things really happen.
My dad owned a darkroom/photoshop/one-hour lab for about 30 years starting in the 70s. I worked for him for about 5 of those years centered around highschool.
There is absolutely no such thing as a foolproof camera. You would not believe all the ways people can screw up even the most "foolproof" of designs.
As just one example: with a traditional 35 mm camera, the film unspools from its lightproof cartridge onto a take-up spool in the camera. When you reach the end of of the roll, you press a button on the camera to release a clutch, then you turn a knob to rewind the film back into its cartridge before opening the camera back and removing the film.
https://filtergrade.com/load-film-35mm-camera/
One obvious and easy to make error is accidentally opening the camera back before rewinding the film, usually ruining ("fogging") all the pictures you shot. :-(
But what you wouldn't guess someone would be able to do is to rewind the film without releasing the clutch. Doing so requires a large amount of force because you're tearing the sprockets off the side of the film where it travels over the gear that's normally used to advance the film.
Any yet, this is something I saw more than one time. Customers would never admit to doing this, but I mean, come on, we'd open the cartridge to remove the film for development and the sides would have been torn off and there's only one way this happens.
Then there's the questions... no, dropping the exposed film did not blur the images.
[1] The one-hour lab equipment we had was semi-automated. The printing machine was about the size of three refrigerators side-by-side. There was a console/desk at one end that I would sit at which had the projection bulb underneath shining up through a small hole over which I'd place each negative one after the next.
The machine had a computer which assumed the colors and exposure in each photo averaged out to an 18% grey image. Looking at the negative, I'd have to punch in offsets: e.g. I'd recognize the image has a lot of sky, or a lot of green foliage, or it's at the beach, etc, or it was over or under exposed, so I'd add "+3 blue" or '+2 green", or whatever I thought was needed to offset from 18% grey, then punch "go". The machine would then expose the negative onto the photo paper above which was on a 4" wide by 1000 foot roll. So it would expose 4" x 6" above, then it would feed the exposed paper into tanks filled with the chemistry to develop the paper. About 12 minutes later (as I recall...) the photos I'd previously exposed would pop out of the machine.
Another employee, or me if it wasn't too busy, would then do quality control. I was pretty good, but some photos I would have misidentified so we'd have to sometimes re-print a few. After we were satisfied with the quality, the photos would all go into a paper envelope and we'd cut the negative roll down from 12, 24, or 36 images into strips of 4 images. Those would go into plastic sleeves and get inserted into the same paper envelope with the photos.
I never really thought about it before, but I guess I've traveled vicariously all over the world through other people's photos. I don't think we ever thought twice about privacy and I don't think our customers did then either. Occasionally someone might mention there were nudes when dropping off a roll, but mostly not.
I vaguely recall we had a customer with a mistress and he would use a different name when dropping off photos that included the mistress because his wife would sometimes come in to pick up the family photos. Okay, one more: a guy who had a new girlfriend every few months and somehow he'd always get his girlfriends to flash the camera. It was amusing because we'd see he had a new girlfriend and knew it would be just a few weeks before he'd have a photo of her flashing her breasts for him. It's been more than 30 years, but those are two I recall.
Oh right, that machine was supposed to produce photos. You mean I wasn't supposed to open that? Well jokes on you. 7 year olds can't read won't read and won't listen either. Oops.
From memory the major problem for me was not the picture quality or an lack of features on the camera. It was the cost of film, developing and that it only had a few exposures per disk.
It was just too expensive to run compared to a 35mm camera. A few years later the disposable 35mm cameras came out and that just killed it completely.
Only problem was price (more expensive to buy and process), and availability (hard to find disc film in a country town).
Growing up we had the Kodak Instamatics — perhaps the worst of the lot?
That's $182 in 2020 dollars for the base model camera. Not exactly budget minded for something competing against 110 cameras.
It was a great concept in theory, but as the articles states the picture quality was terrible. Every picture I took was a little bit blurry with over exposed colours and that was after taking them to a processor who had the right equipment. I also tried various different brands and qualities of film, all with the same result.
I have about 80 disc negatives in a cupboard somewhere. I wanted to scan them to JPG, but I couldn't find a DIY scanner that accepts the format without having to cut the frames from the disc and put them in to a 35mm slide mount. There are a few companies that have the means to scan them, but they are pricey - I was quoted €30.00 to scan one disc.
I feel that if Kodak had waited a few years and did a bit more work to increase the formats resolution it might have been more of a success. The small size of disc cameras were their biggest selling point, but that counted for nothing when the image quality was so poor.