More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
For Kodachrome Fans, Road Ends at Photo Lab in Kansas
By A. G. SULZBERGER, New York Times
December 29, 2010

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PARSONS, Kan. ? An unlikely pilgrimage is under way to Dwayne?s Photo, a small family business that has through luck and persistence become the last processor in the world of Kodachrome, the first successful color film and still the most beloved.

That celebrated 75-year run from mainstream to niche photography is scheduled to come to an end on Thursday when the last processing machine is shut down here to be sold for scrap.

In the last weeks, dozens of visitors and thousands of overnight packages have raced here, transforming this small prairie-bound city not far from the Oklahoma border for a brief time into a center of nostalgia for the days when photographs appeared not in the sterile frame of a computer screen or in a pack of flimsy prints from the local drugstore but in the warm glow of a projector pulling an image from a carousel of vivid slides.

In the span of minutes this week, two such visitors arrived. The first was a railroad worker who had driven from Arkansas to pick up 1,580 rolls of film that he had just paid $15,798 to develop. The second was an artist who had driven directly here after flying from London to Wichita, Kan., on her first trip to the United States to turn in three rolls of film and shoot five more before the processing deadline.

The artist, Aliceson Carter, 42, was incredulous as she watched the railroad worker, Jim DeNike, 53, loading a dozen boxes that contained nearly 50,000 slides into his old maroon Pontiac. He explained that every picture inside was of railroad trains and that he had borrowed money from his father?s retirement account to pay for developing them.

?That?s crazy to me,? Ms. Carter said. Then she snapped a picture of Mr. DeNike on one of her last rolls.

Demanding both to shoot and process, Kodachrome rewarded generations of skilled users with a richness of color and a unique treatment of light that many photographers described as incomparable even as they shifted to digital cameras. ?Makes you think all the world?s a sunny day,? Paul Simon sang in his 1973 hit Kodachrome, which carried the plea ?Mama, don?t take my Kodachrome away.?

As news media around the world have heralded Thursday?s end of an era, rolls of the discontinued film that had been hoarded in freezers and tucked away in closets, sometimes for decades, have flooded Dwayne?s Photo, arriving from six continents.

?It?s more than a film, it?s a pop culture icon,? said Todd Gustavson, a curator from the George Eastman House, a photography museum in Rochester in the former residence of the Kodak founder. ?If you were in the postwar baby boom, it was the color film, no doubt about it.?

Among the recent visitors was Steve McCurry, a photographer whose work has appeared for decades in National Geographic including his well-known cover portrait, shot in Kodachrome, of a Afghan girl that highlights what he describes as the ?sublime quality? of the film. When Kodak stopped producing the film last year, the company gave him the last roll, which he hand-delivered to Parsons. ?I wasn?t going to take any chances,? he explained.

At the peak, there were about 25 labs worldwide that processed Kodachrome, but the last Kodak-run facility in the United States closed several years ago, then the one in Japan and then the one in Switzerland. Since then, all that was left has been Dwayne?s Photo. Last year, Kodak stopped producing the chemicals needed to develop the film, providing the business with enough to continue processing through the end of 2010. And last week, right on schedule, the lab opened up the last canister of blue dye.

Kodak declined to comment for this article.

The status of lone survivor is a point of pride for Dwayne Steinle, who remembers being warned more than once by a Kodak representative after he opened the business more than a half-century ago that the area was too sparsely populated for the studio to succeed. It has survived in part because Mr. Steinle and his son Grant focused on lower-volume specialties ? like black-and-white and print-to-print developing, and, in the early ?90s, the processing of Kodachrome.

Still, the toll of the widespread switch to digital photography has been painful for Dwayne?s, much as it has for Kodak. In the last decade, the number of employees has been cut to about 60 from 200 and digital sales now account for nearly half of revenue. Most of the staff and even the owners acknowledge that they primarily use digital cameras. ?That?s what we see as the future of the business,? said Grant Steinle, who runs the business now.

The passing of Kodachrome has been much noted, from the CBS News program Kodachrome: The Legendary Film's Last Days - CBS Sunday Morning - CBS News Sunday Morning to The Irish Times, but it is noteworthy in no small part for how long it survived. Created in 1935, Kodachrome was an instant hit as the first film to effectively render color.

Even when it stopped being the default film for chronicling everyday life ? thanks in part to the move to prints from slides ? it continued to be the film of choice for many hobbyists and medical professionals. Dr. Bharat Nathwani, 65, a Los Angeles pathologist, lamented that he still had 400 unused rolls. ?I might hold it, God willing that Kodak sees its lack of wisdom.?

This week, the employees at Dwayne?s worked at a frenetic pace, keeping a processing machine that has typically operated just a few hours a day working around the clock (one of the many notes on the lab wall reads: ?I took this to a drugstore and they didn?t even know what it was?).

?We really didn?t expect it to be this crazy,? said Lanie George, who manages the Kodachrome processing department.

One of the toughest decisions was how to deal with the dozens of requests from amateurs and professionals alike to provide the last roll to be processed.

In the end, it was determined that a roll belonging to Dwayne Steinle, the owner, would be last. It took three tries to find a camera that worked. And over the course of the week he fired off shots of his house, his family and downtown Parsons. The last frame is already planned for Thursday, a picture of all the employees standing in front of Dwayne?s wearing shirts with the epitaph: ?The best slide and movie film in history is now officially retired. Kodachrome: 1935-2010.?
 

Retired

Member
Having had the opportunity to use numerous color fils of the day, my favorite best photographs were made with Kodachrome. Luckily I can continue to enjoy them after scanning and saving all those slides.
 

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
I always had Kodacrome for the reds and Fujichrome for the greens. At one point, I had two camera bodies so I was able to keep one loaded with each. Those were the days. :)
 

Yuray

Member
Those were the days. :)
Yes they were. Most people view the passing of Kodachrome as insignifigant, perhaps no more special than the passing of the Popeil Pocket Fisherman, etc.
I frequently wander into my darkroom and sit there looking at all I have. The smell of the chemistry is still somewhat pungent. I see my enlargers, retired Nikon and Pentax cameras, piles of contact sheets, and the general messiness that I worked in. Finally, when I am about to leave, I let the good old Gra Lab timer sound off.:)
 

Retired

Member
Kodacrome for the reds and Fujichrome for the greens.

Exactly!

I would speculate that we three must have been separated at birth, because our interests in photography are interstingly similar. I don't know if David, you did any processing, though you have mentioned you had done extensive photography.

I still have a Nikon F3 along with a few lenses, but I sold most of my stuff when we retired and began traveling. That was the beginning of digital photography, which lent itself mugh better to traveling in a motorcoach. However I began processing B&W as young teeneger, having learned it from my father. I had an old (very old) Kodak difusion enlarger that my father had used in the forties.

Because of my interest in photography in those days, I took a commercial photography course from Harry Sidel (School of Modern Photography) and did commercial photography for several years (B&W as well as color (Ektacolor)).

Ah... those wonderful days in the darkroom, developing film, printing pictures, showing my girlfriends around my darkroom......:confidential:
 

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
I remember Ektacolor (and was there Ektachrome?) - never got as excited about that as Kodachrome.

I always used manual cameras (Olympus OM-1 and OM-2 in manual mode; Nikon FM2) and I got to the point where I needed correction both for near and far vision and that made focusing and exposure difficult - I could correct for either the subject or the exposure details in the viewfinder but not both at the same time and that made photography frustrating. I was also pretty busy anyway in those days so I ended up giving my equipment to my son. It took a few years to get back to it with digital photography but that's fun again - Nikon autofocus lenses are amazing. :)
 

Retired

Member
Ektacolor was the color negative film that required color correction using filters in the enlarger; Ektachrome, of course was the slide film that was also used as a positive negative. Colors were not bad, and close to neutral compare to Kodachrome that saturated the reds and had brilliant whites.

I wish I had not sold my better Nikon lenses, thinking I'd never be able to use them again in a digital camera..how wrong I was:eek:
 

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
My son is still using my old manual Nikon lenses. My favorite was a 135 mm f2.8 lens and he's still taking great shots with that and with the basic 50mm f1.4 lens too. :)
 
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