No More Kodak Black and White Paper

kodak bw paper.jpg Kodak decides to stop black and white paper production.

Today is a sad day for photography! According to an Associated Press article released on June 16th, Kodak has decided to discontinue the production of black and white photo paper. Though we understand the reasoning behind the decision most true photographers will be sad to see it go. The 25% decline year over year in black and white sales is no surprise with the rise of digital photography. Digital photography has improved the process and cost of photography in general and popularity of old black and white technology has fallen by the wayside. The article outlines that Kodak will continue to offer black and white film and chemicals to the niche market however will not produce black and white paper any longer. Other companies such as Illford will still provide black and white paper to the industry. Black and white is a process that is often used by students, fine art photographers, and hobbyists. Customers may purchase the paper from their local photo retail stores until supplies run out.

More details below


Kodak discontinues black-and-white photo paper

ROCHESTER, JUNE 16: Ending a century-old tradition, Eastman Kodak Co will soon stop making black-and-white photographic paper, a niche product for fine-art photographers and hobbyists that is rapidly being supplanted by digital-imaging systems.

Kodak said on Wednesday it will discontinue production of the paper, specially designed for black-and-white film, at the end of this year. But the world’s biggest film manufacturer will continue to make black-and-white film and chemicals for processing. “It’s a shame to see it go,” said Bill Schiffner, editor of Imaging Business magazine in Melville, New York. “Digital has done a lot of good things for the industry but it’s done some bad things too. It’s making a lot of these processes obsolete.” The paper is manufactured at a plant in Brazil.

Kodak declined to specify how many employees would be affected by the production shutdown, which is part of a three-year overhaul to eliminate 12,000 to 15,000 jobs by 2007 and shrink the company’s work force to around 50,000.

As the industry shifts rapidly from chemical-based to digital imaging, demand for black-and-white paper is declining about 25 per cent annually, Kodak spokesman David Lanzillo said.

John Eoff, owner of Photo-Lab Inc, said his 91-year-old shop in Schenectady, N.Y., still sells “a fair amount” of black-and-white paper to photography students and enthusiasts, while professional photographers have mostly gone to digital printing systems already. “What we assumed was going to happen is the traditional black-and-white paper processing was going to remain more an art form than a commodity,” Eoff said.

Other companies, led by Ilford Imaging of Britain, still make paper and there will be demand for it, he predicted. In April, Kodak posted a first-quarter loss of $142 million, citing a steady slide in revenues from film and other chemical-based businesses and higher-than-expected costs to cover job cuts. This month, it replaced its chief executive, Dan Carp, with Antonio Perez, who a few years ago oversaw the rapid growth of Hewlett-Packard Co’s digital imaging business.

Kodak grew into an icon on the strength of its traditional film, paper and photofinishing businesses. It is now betting its future in digital terrain — from cameras, inkjet paper and online photofinishing to photo kiosks and minilabs, X-ray systems and commercial printers.

Ilford, the largest maker of black-and-white photo paper, went into bankruptcy last year, emerging this year after a management-led buyout. Germany’s AgfaPhoto GmbH filed for bankruptcy last month.
‘‘Kodak’s exit from the business “doesn’t surprise me” because many portrait and wedding photographers “are switching over to digital,” said Christopher Chute, said an analyst.


Technorati Tags : | |

Posted by chad on 20:02, June 16 2005

News Email to a friend Print Version

Trackback Pings

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://blog.fotolia.com/mt-tb2.cgi/925

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference No More Kodak Black and White Paper:

» Black White de Black White
Join Ring - Login Wildlife Photography Black & White Gallery's mis [Read more]

Tracked on February 16, 2007 06:11 PM

» Ilford Inkjet Paper de Ilford Inkjet Paper
Ilford is an established and has set the standard for the hig [Read more]

Tracked on April 22, 2007 02:40 AM

» Black And White Art de Black And White Art
Fine Art landscape images by Keith Cooper Black and white photography, Contemporary fine art picture [Read more]

Tracked on July 12, 2007 08:06 PM

Comments

Post a comment

If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be pre-approved by Fotolia before your comment will appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.

Remember me


Stock images - Stock photos - Royalty free images - Royalty free photos Fotolia US Imágenes de archivo - Imágenes libres de derechos - Fotos de archivo - Fotos libres de derechos Fotolia España Photos libres de droits - Images libres de droits - Ilustrations libres de droits Fotolia France Stock images - Stock photos - Royalty free images - Royalty free photos Fotolia UK Bildarchiv - Fotoagentur - royalty-freie Fotos - Stock Images Fotolia Deutchland
 Fotolia Italia  Fotolia Portugal  Fotolia Brasil  Fotolia 日本