While the title of my topic is somewhat terse and abrupt, there is truth in it. I recently viewed a set of photos of the Kodak film department buildings and they sank my heart. Kodak, the ingenious brainchild of Mr. Eastman, invented modern photography and also assisted with the development of digital photography. Without Kodak, we might not have had handheld cameras we could take with us everywhere. Before Kodak, photographers were relegated to the back of a large box on a tripod.
Film was a beautiful medium. And though I was quick to take up digital photography, I am sad to see it's father company fade away into the mist of antiquity. When I started into photography 20 years ago, I used my Dad's Yashica FX3 35mm SLR with a 35-70mm zoom and I used black and white film and learned how to develop it. My favourite was the T-MAX 400. Gorgeous film and it had amazing latitude for push processing. It was also very tolerant both in handling and also in developing. It had rich blacks and a gorgeous gamut of greys to white. Kodak's development chemicals were genius as well, since, you could reuse it by applying a developer refresher chemical. Develop, stop, fix, rinse. That was the photoshop of the age. Dodge and burn were physical applications during enlargement. I still have all my equipment. I can't seem to let it go. There is no use for it anymore.
I know, there are still companies making film. Fujifilm still makes it, but I'm not aware of any others, though I'm sure there are more. But, the demise of Kodak in the film sense, is but the tip of the film age iceberg.
Farewell, fair medium, I shall miss the intimate time we had.