mwainfeld Posted December 29, 2010 Share Posted December 29, 2010 <p>Last 3 rolls out! I thought I had blown it but UPS overnight ($51) says delivery by 10:30 tomorrow. </p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
plasma181 Posted December 29, 2010 Share Posted December 29, 2010 <p>Of course, for those of you who procrastinate until tomorrow, there is still one more way to get the film to Kansas in a hurry. :-) </p> <p><a href=" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andre_noble5 Posted December 29, 2010 Share Posted December 29, 2010 <p>I just sent 18 rolls of Kodachrome 64 via Fed Ex overnight, $56. (I shot all of it in the last week as I discovered 18 fresh rolls in the freezer.) The Fed Ex lady at the LAX airport is an enthusiastic amatuer photographer, but was surprised to here of Kodachrome's passing.</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jeffrey L.T. von Glück Posted December 29, 2010 Share Posted December 29, 2010 <p>My rolls went out FedEx last night ca. 6.30 p.m. and were delivered this morning by 10 a.m. I hope those of you who used the Postal Service make it in by noon tomorrow. Good luck to all!</p> <p>PS.--Dwayne's is selling great commemorative Kodachrome T-shirts on their Web site. Have a look, I bought one and it just arrived yesterday.</p> Jeffrey L. T. von Gluck Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
d_f11 Posted December 29, 2010 Share Posted December 29, 2010 <p>I say we all put our heads together and think of some way to help Bogdan. What he's going through would be utter hell for me...</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fredonian Posted December 29, 2010 Share Posted December 29, 2010 <p>I would not in any way ask that anyone doubt or dispute Dwayne's firm received-by-noon stance and deadline, but I can also imagine it a faint possability that they might very quietly deal with any remaining packages that might arrive after the deadline or fill in the Post Office box that day. I would not BANK on it however, but it could happen this way behind the scene and I expect they would do it very quietly. They had to give a firm deadline and I expect they will be developing what is received before noon for a day or two afterwards. I am not sure how many they have received in the last week, but I would love to know the numbers. Good luck everyone!</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shalom_septimus Posted December 29, 2010 Share Posted December 29, 2010 <p>I sent in two rolls today. I never shot much slide film, but I had a couple rolls in the freezer that I didn't want to waste, so I loaded the 35mm one into the Kin-Dar Stereo, and the 120 I cut down to 828 size and shoehorned it into the Flash Bantam; normally I cut down 120 into two rolls of 828, but I have now determined by experiment that if you trim the paper leader to the minimum, you can actually fit 16 exposures on one 828 spool. (What does that make it, 1628? :) Finished up the rolls with pictures of the snow (lots here in Jersey), found that overnight mail isn't, and went to Federal Express instead. $24 worth of developing cost me $35.09 to ship. ouch.It would have been cheaper if I told them to deliver it in the afternoon, but I didn't want to find out the hard way that they really mean 12:00 on the dot.</p> <p>Still have one roll of PKR120 left (I kept the one with the better box). Now I wonder if DR5 can process that as B&W transparency?</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
melmann Posted December 30, 2010 Share Posted December 30, 2010 <p>UPS appears to have screwed me. I sent my last two rolls to Dwayne's last week and the tracking number has shown "out for delivery" for a week. Talked with UPS explaining the critical deadline of the 30th (and that they supposedly promised delivery in two days) and seems all they wanted to discuss was the value of the contents and the 8 days it has to be undelivered before they will declare it lost. They have been pretty much useless to me, even when I gave them plenty of time.</p> <p>Dwayne's confirms they haven't received it so I don't know if I'll see these slides - ever.</p> <p>Yeah, I know it was the Christmas holiday rush but I'm puzzled how a bar-code scanning system that supposedly tracks each package and is performed by a human driver can not show a discrepancy of loaded vs. delivered at the end of the day. Why can't someone just go check out the inside of the truck and find my package?!?</p> <p>Anyone else have problems with UPS getting your film to Dwayne's? Who can you trust these days?</p> <p>Guess I should have hand-delivered the film - less than a day's drive.</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nicholas_rapak Posted December 30, 2010 Share Posted December 30, 2010 <p>UPS delivered my film at 10:13 AM today, according to schedule. I have a feeling that yours was delivered, but the carrier just forgot to scan it. You'll probably have to wait another week before you get a definitive answer, as Dwayne's is 10 days behind schedule.</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dr._karl_hoppe Posted December 30, 2010 Share Posted December 30, 2010 <p><em><strong>Fed Ex, Fed Ex, Fed Ex! ! !</strong></em></p> <p>Anything else is risky. The US Postal Service is totally unreliable -- "Express" Mail is a sick joke. UPS is not much better but clearly not as "iffy" as the USPS.</p> <p>If you want truly reliable delivery, you must use Federal Express. It's the only overnight courier I've used that delivers on time without fail, natural disasters aside.</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mercedes_colona Posted December 30, 2010 Share Posted December 30, 2010 <p>Culturally, the XXth Century "un-officially" ended today at 12 noon. Kodachrome, RIP!!!</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jeffrey L.T. von Glück Posted December 30, 2010 Share Posted December 30, 2010 <p>Just as the 1960s "unofficially" ended at 4 May 1970 with the Kent State shootings, I don't think it's too much of a stretch to say the 20th century "unofficially" ended 10 years later at 12 noon, 30 December 2010. The iconic emulsion which documented the historic events of that era is no more to be processed. Kodachrome, RIP, indeed!</p> Jeffrey L. T. von Gluck Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steve ward Posted December 30, 2010 Share Posted December 30, 2010 <p>I have not been able to shoot for the sake of shooting, so two rolls remain in my fridge. Even Velvia will work on the snowbank outside, so I guess I have collector's items now. How would we be able to find out if another opportunity to procees these last rolls ever comes up?<br> I would not want to miss it again.<br> It is a very sad day.</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
photo5 Posted December 30, 2010 Share Posted December 30, 2010 <p>Sadly my one last roll mailed on Monday the 27th did not make it to Dwayne's today. Said expected delivery was Wednesday, but even today (Thursday) it is still in transit. Oh well. I had shot 15 exposures at Christmas and the rest was just shots in and around my home.<br> I wonder what Dwayne's will do with all the rolls that arrive after noon on the 30th? Throw them away?<br> Very sad day indeed. They took my Kodachrome away today...</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steve m smith Posted December 30, 2010 Share Posted December 30, 2010 <blockquote> <p>I wonder what Dwayne's will do with all the rolls that arrive after noon on the 30th? Throw them away?</p> </blockquote> <p>As long as the chemistry lasts, I expect they will process them. No point turning away good business on the principle of upholding an arbitrary cutoff date.</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
d_f11 Posted December 30, 2010 Share Posted December 30, 2010 <p>I know for a fact they are swamped.</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steve_czerviski Posted December 30, 2010 Share Posted December 30, 2010 <p>I sent out 17 rolls on the 13th of December, I didn' t want to wait until " the end push " for various reasons. I have been using Kodachrome 25 / 64 since 1992 and only wish I had of started sooner. My slides are on their way back via FedEx. Most of the slides are of military aircraft but, our vacation this year took us to Yellowstone National Park, Grand Teton National Park... which included a 2 hour raft ride down the Snake River with the majestic Tetons all around. Other stops included Salt Lake City, Utah; Bear Lake, Utah; Oregon Trail, Idaho; Town Square Jackson Hole, Wyoming; Mount Rushmore, South Dakota and various other little stops along the way.<br> The anticipation of waiting for the slides to come back is part of the " slide experience " as only people who have shot them know. I will continue to use slide film ( now Fuji Provia 100f ) but, it won't be the same as waiting on the Kodachrome to come back. I new my images would be colorful, sharp and archivable. Thanks for all the great memories Kodachrome, RIP 1935 - 2010. A sad day and the End of an Era.</p> <p>Steve</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
allancobb Posted December 31, 2010 Share Posted December 31, 2010 <p>RIP indeed! During my last visit with my parents (both in their 80s) we perused my Mom's slides shot on Kodachrome-X through her Leica IIIg... my baby pix (from 1959-60), visits to the DC Tidal Basin cherry blossoms in the 50s and 60s, all look like they were shot last week! What an incredible archival medium that is no more. My last roll made it in by FedEx yesterday morning, shots of downtown Louisville KY while on an airline layover; I unloaded my Yashica TL-Electro and found the FedEX office before I had to get back to the hotel and continue on with my trip!</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
johngraves Posted January 1, 2011 Share Posted January 1, 2011 <p>My last 2 rolls of exposed Kodachome went in the mail on Tuesday with the comment from our beloved PO that they would proboably make it. I also saw a comment somewhere that Dwayne's had opened their last bucket of blue dye. Kodak makes it easy?<br> Anyone want a deal on 4 24 exp rolls pf Kodachrome 200, or do I mount them on the wall as a sad rememberance?<br> John G.</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
randrew1 Posted January 1, 2011 Share Posted January 1, 2011 <p>I don't recall any blue dye used in Process K-14. The closest thing to dyes are the cyan, yellow, and magenta couplers that are colorless until they react with oxidized color developer.</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nicholas_rapak Posted January 2, 2011 Share Posted January 2, 2011 <p>"Blue dye" probably = cyan coupler. the vast majority (99.9%) of NYT readers have no clue what a color coupler is, and they have no desire to find out. </p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
randrew1 Posted January 2, 2011 Share Posted January 2, 2011 <p>A news article only tangentially about Kodachrome but with some timely advice about archiving.</p> <h1><a href="http://www.standard.net/topics/utah/2011/01/01/make-2011-year-you-preserve-your-own-past-future">Make 2011 the year you preserve your own past for the future</a></h1> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
d_f11 Posted January 3, 2011 Share Posted January 3, 2011 <p>Would e-mailing this entire forum to Dwayne's have any impact?</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Karim Ghantous Posted January 3, 2011 Share Posted January 3, 2011 <p>D F: no. Sadly they can't help the fact that there is no more chemistry. Unless you were asking something else. :-)</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Karim Ghantous Posted January 3, 2011 Share Posted January 3, 2011 <p>Ron: I read that piece. Awful advice when you think about it. Printing e-mails & digital photos? Yeah, right, that will make sure they don't disappear... not. The best way to make sure that a Kodachrome slide is preserved indefinitely is to scan it. But we can enjoy the actual slide while it lasts. Which is, thankfully, a long time.</p> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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