Save Our Kodachrome S.O.K. Club!

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Patrick
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Post by Patrick »

As much as I would hate to see K40 go and I know that most of my future exposed Ektachorme 64T footage will not be around for as long as I am, it is a fact that the development of Kodachrome is hazardous to the environment. I have even heard that for years, there was pressure put on Kodak by environmental groups to stop Kodachrome. Although tragic in one sense, the end of Kodachrome was one tiny step in the right direction for saving this planet.

Sometimes good things can come out of bad things.
Super8SLiCK
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Post by Super8SLiCK »

I see your point, however, but there isn't a whole lot of Kodachrome being used today as there are other major sources of pollutants.

I don't mind the environmental tradeoff for my K40.
"If you work real hard, show respect, do your duty and don't object, looks like you're fitting the mold, so don't start acting suspect."

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Patrick
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Post by Patrick »

Kodachrome slide film still seems quite popular.
tlatosmd
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Post by tlatosmd »

Jürgen stated here several times there is no environmental problem with K40, the chemical waste from the process is sold to other companies that use it for other things.
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John_Pytlak
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Film Processing and the Environment

Post by John_Pytlak »

Modern film processes (including K-14) have been reformulated for minimum environmental impact. Labs recycle the chemistry, recover almost all of the silver, and use Kodak's assistance to meet environmental standards:

http://www.kodak.com/eknec/PageQuerier. ... cale=en_US
John Pytlak
EI Customer Technical Services
Research Lab, Building 69
Eastman Kodak Company
Rochester, NY 14650-1922 USA
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