----- Original Message ----- 
From: "David Miers"
Subject: Conversation with small Photo Development shop owner: future
of film


> He
> did make a comment that Fuji is the only film company that actually
makes
> film in the USA yet.  I have no idea if this is accurate or not.

I think Kodak is still in business over in Rochester. Last time I
checked, Canada wasn't much interested in taking New York into
Confederation.

Fuji has a paper coating plant in the USA. They set it up in order to
satisfy Wal-Mart's requiremennts regarding American manufacture to
make themselves an acceptable business partner.
As far as I know, all of Fuji's film stock is still being coated in
Tokyo, although they may be shipping the American market masters to
Tennessee for cutting and spooling.

>
> Another piece of trivia here that I do not know the accuracy of.
He claimed
> that the Agfa equipment he was working with still used an optical
process
> rather then simply scanning and making a digital file.  He claimed
that the
> Frontier machines were using this type of digital scan on film
however.  I'm
> a bit skeptical of his statement here I guess since it is still all
printed
> on a laser type printer.

Scanning is an optical process.
A light is shone through the negative and a sensor on the other side
reads it.

William Robb


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