DPChallenge: A Digital Photography Contest You are not logged in. (log in or register
 

DPChallenge Forums >> Photography Discussion >> The future of photofinishing?
Pages:  
Showing posts 1 - 6 of 6, (reverse)
AuthorThread
03/05/2003 02:12:21 PM · #1
This is taken out of the Nikon PMA news discussion. Please read it to the end, I want to know your opinion about the new opportunities for prining photobooks instead of putting individual photo's in a book (most end up in shoebox because you don't have time)....

Originally posted by Morgan:

NIKON

- Finally, an interesting point was offered, Nikon felt that the role of the photo-finisher was still vital. They believe that most folks do not wish to print their own images. Yet, Nikon also said that the cost for a retailer to deal with a digital print job was significantly higher than with a film print job. So, the idea of a low cost print run was a real chellenge. The time sorting the print job out with the customer was much longer and eats up sales cycles. It was more in line with the effort to make reprints. Therefore, the cost will not be as low as when developing and printing a C-41 film. The web helps, but with large file sizes the average user is still restricted. It is not realistic to upload 20 to 40 images at 2 Mb to 3 Mb each. It would take hours or much smaller JPEGs are required, which lessons the end quality.

As well, they offered a real concern that family-type photography that is normally cherished and archieved for many years, will be lost or seriously reduced with the digital era. I must admit that I agree with these thoughts, what do you think?


I see new opportunities for the photo-finishing industry. It won't be long before the amount of digital prints is going to take over film processing. I've seen the amount of digital files offered to the photofinisher I always go to, grow rapidly in the last year.
Kodak has seen its profits tumble because film sales are rapidly declining and Fuji seems to rule most of the commercial photofinishing industry and Fuji has already adapted to digital.
Economies of scale, advances in technology etc will push the prices of digital prints down very soon and the prices of film prints up (negative economies of scale).

The new opportunities I see are more in the digital press region. Anyone heard of the Nexpress 2100 by Heidelberg/Kodak? It is a digital offset press with analog press quality. You don't feed it print plates and stuff like that, no, you feed it PDF's. The costs to set the thing up for a few or a single print(s) are much lower and the costs of the print itself are reasonble. Now, what has this got to do with photography?

The possiblity to have your photobook printed on a press with high quality, just the way you want it, for a reasonable price. The only thing you have to do is create the PDF('s).
Example: You have been photographing your kid for a whole year since his/her birth. Now you want an easy way to remember that year with a selection out of the thousand photo's you took.
You select the 50/100/200/300 best photo's. Perhaps you give them a title, a caption, a little story and dates even. Create the PDF (yes it will be large, but there will be a solution, no doubt), bring it to the press and have your book printed while you wait. First some samples of a few pages to get the colors right. Lets print!
How many do you want? One for you, one for your kid, one for your ex-husband/wife, two for the grandparents? One is almost as expensive per item as five....

Now that would be cool I think.
Image a book for every year your kid grew older. And when he/she is ready to leave the house: surprise, your own 20 copies. :)

And the same could be done with holidays, just photo's you really like a lot, of the whole family, parties where the whole family was present. Collect everyone's photo's and make one book out of all of them for everyone who wants one.

That could be a great future and it could be a real boost for family photography as well.

Of course you can do the same with digital albums, but I like photobooks more than I like digital albums. That will never change.

What do you think about this people?

edit: The Nexpress 2100 is not a home printer by the way, it is a proffesional press that fills a whole room and weighs several tons and costs its weight in gold. :)
And I don't want to say that this thing is capable of making a whole book, I think it can, but am not sure anymore. The possibilities are there.

Message edited by author 2003-03-05 14:16:59.
03/05/2003 02:21:59 PM · #2
If this binds the photos into a book and was reasonably priced it would be a pretty cool thing.

03/05/2003 02:31:42 PM · #3
From what you describe, this has been available for a few years, notably directly from within iPhoto on the Mac platform and some other online finishing places

E.g., iPhoto book binding

Message edited by author 2003-03-05 14:32:49.
03/05/2003 02:46:57 PM · #4
That is indeed what I mean, but in this form I find the control a bit limited and the price is too high for just 10 pages.
And I cannot imagine pumping the amount of data needed for a press quality book of 10 pages trough a cable connection. The amount of data should be huge.

Any experiences with it? How does it look etc.
03/05/2003 04:22:31 PM · #5
You might want to check out a program that Kodak is doing called ProShots. It is geared twoards the event photographer but the system is in place to do everything from just printing, to finished albums all with being able to see exactly what it will look like finished.
//www.kodak.com/global/en/professional/hub/proShots/index.jhtml
03/05/2003 04:42:09 PM · #6
Originally posted by Azrifel:


And I cannot imagine pumping the amount of data needed for a press quality book of 10 pages trough a cable connection. The amount of data should be huge.

Any experiences with it? How does it look etc.


Never underestimate the bandwidth of a stack of CDs through the post. Latency isn't great but the bandwidth far exceeds any wired medium for data transfer. I do most of my photo printing that way, as 128k upload is painful.
Pages:  
Current Server Time: 07/23/2025 04:59:41 PM

Please log in or register to post to the forums.


Home - Challenges - Community - League - Photos - Cameras - Lenses - Learn - Help - Terms of Use - Privacy - Top ^
DPChallenge, and website content and design, Copyright © 2001-2025 Challenging Technologies, LLC.
All digital photo copyrights belong to the photographers and may not be used without permission.
Current Server Time: 07/23/2025 04:59:41 PM EDT.