The Chemistry of Kodak Film - Smarter Every Day 275-C

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  • Опубликовано: 5 июл 2024
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    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    ALL Kodak Videos on Smarter Every Day:
    MAIN CHANNEL VIDEO
    How Kodak Makes Film Light Sensitive (How Film is Made, Part 2) - Smarter Every Day 275
    • How Does Kodak Make Fi...
    2ND CHANNEL VIDEOS
    Kodak's Film Quality Control Process - Smarter Every Day 275-B
    • Kodak's Film Quality C...
    The Chemistry of Kodak Film - Smarter Every Day 275-C
    • The Chemistry of Kodak...
    PART 1
    How Does Kodak Make Film? (Kodak Factory Tour Part 1 of 3) - Smarter Every Day 271
    • How Does Kodak Make Fi...
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    The awesome people at Indie Film Lab is putting on a "Long Live Film Workshop" on October 17-20, 2022. It's a gathering of professionals, hobbyists, experts, and beginners alike, all with one thing in common - a love for the art of film photography. If you're interested, there's a FAQ and registration form here: www.longlivefilmworkshop.com/ .
    Here's a video Jeff said did a good job explaining the chemistry of film:
    • ADVANCED EMULSION: Sil...
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    Warm Regards,
    Destin
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Комментарии • 577

  • @SmarterEveryDay2
    @SmarterEveryDay2  Год назад +509

    Can we all agree that Dr. Jeff Hansen is a pretty amazing tour guide? If you feel like this content is worth your time and you'd like to enable me to keep making stuff like this, please consider supporting on Patreon. www.patreon.com/smartereveryday . If you enjoy the channel, that's the single best way to help. Thank you!

    • @IsaiahBuildStuff
      @IsaiahBuildStuff Год назад +5

      He is the best!!

    • @Mikewhocheeesehairy
      @Mikewhocheeesehairy Год назад +7

      Any person with the knowledge and passion like Jeff has must be such a blessing to be around. Thanks for these videos, this is one of my favorite series so far.

    • @thomashenden71
      @thomashenden71 Год назад +5

      Please bring @Kodak a great "THANK YOU" from us millions and millions film fans, this is outright so fascinating, finally we were able to see how film really is made and not the least, the quality control which has some kind of a NASA level to it. These times, it is so important to see that science really works and give us wonderful, colourful results, in the case of physical film. And thank you for giving us this! As you say, many times: AWESOME!!!

    • @danielbrowniel
      @danielbrowniel Год назад +2

      thankyou for showing this my grandpa worked here, never knew what it was like, it's incredible.

    • @VEE727
      @VEE727 Год назад +3

      I hope he loses weight. He's gasping for breath just standing around. I want this kind man to stick around for very long

  • @jeremiahrohr3655
    @jeremiahrohr3655 Год назад +180

    Dustin, having worked in a Kodak coating room back in the 80's, you did a great job of getting into the inner sanctum of this amazing industry. My father who worked for Kodak for over 40 year always told me, Kodak is not a camera or picture company it is a chemical and chemical processing company in an absolutely niche market of photography.
    Unfortunately, since they were basically run by really good chemical engineers, they completely failed to recognize the digital revolution even though their own research department invented the digital camera, much to their demise.
    I have always thought a really good, in-depth documentary series on the 130 years of Kodak would be a fascinating insight into a piece of American ingenuity. And I'm talking about not just the development of the company, but all of its products, research and genius around the technology of chemical photography as well as the other successes and failures of this business.
    While you have done a great job of showing how this technology works, you have only scratched the surface of this industry and all the things that this company was involved in. There is a wealth of technology and knowledge inside the wall of Eastman Kodak that a vast majority of people have no clue of. Stay curious and I hope you do more on this subject.

    • @jackthompson6296
      @jackthompson6296 Год назад +4

      Someone call Ken Burns

    • @vasilis8208
      @vasilis8208 Год назад

      Have you always used the multi-layer laminar flow procedure for applying the colour emulsion, or did you once apply the layers individually, one after the other?

    • @renebohmer3206
      @renebohmer3206 10 месяцев назад

      Dear Jeremia, do you know how many Rolls of Film Kodak produces, yearly, these days? Im trying to find out for some time now. Just cant find any sources :-)

    • @jeejbeej
      @jeejbeej 10 месяцев назад +1

      It's also sad that they didn't recognize the need to diversify and use their chemical expertise to get into other markets. Fujifilm did and still is a massive company, with film and even digital photography just being a fraction of what they make money on.

    • @grn1
      @grn1 9 месяцев назад +1

      Alec of Technology Connections has done a few videos talking about film and history though not nearly to the extent he's covered RCA or toasters. The history of Kodak would certainly be right up his alley though.

  • @boomfiziks
    @boomfiziks Год назад +207

    As a chemistry teacher, this tickles my brain. I do a chemical photo lab (turn their T-shirts into a photographic film) and this will be a great springboard into this lab and topics.

    • @EkiToji
      @EkiToji Год назад +2

      Probably a great way to introduce the discussion of surfactants and the differences between liposomes and micelles. Not to mention talk of interstitial defects and all that fun jazz.

    • @buuh7592
      @buuh7592 Год назад +15

      do you have a video or something about that t-shirt to photo film experiment? that sounds awwesome!

    • @tannenman
      @tannenman Год назад +3

      @@buuh7592 Also interested!

    • @thestandardaccount
      @thestandardaccount Год назад +4

      Please elaborate on the shirt film thing! Sounds awesome

    • @boomfiziks
      @boomfiziks Год назад +9

      @@buuh7592 I’m not sure what happened, but apparently my previous reply didn’t go through. So let me try again. To find the lab, do a search for “Flinn scientific “. Once on their site, search for “blueprint t-shirt”. We first practiced making prints on white paper towels, seeing what worked and didn’t work, before moving onto T-shirts. One issue that arose was that either certain detergents or water would wash away the color, leaving behind a pale yellow image. I think this year we are going to try bleach T-shirts, following the procedures from the RUclips channel of “The king of random”. Do a search for “bleach shirts” on that channel.

  • @dooterino
    @dooterino Год назад +301

    I love this guy, I'd love to spend a day talking emulsions with him, maybe I could plant the seed to get Aerochrome back in production lmao

    • @FookFish
      @FookFish Год назад

      ikr!

    • @bubbly6379
      @bubbly6379 Год назад +3

      I wish aerochrome existed 😭

    • @bentuttle
      @bentuttle Год назад +1

      He isnt why they dont make Aerochrome...

    • @programagor
      @programagor Год назад +1

      The Infrared laser used for QC nowadays as well as the infrared cameras would expose it, though...

    • @stratocactus
      @stratocactus Год назад +9

      @@programagor I guess it's not impossible to turn off the IR laser and IR cameras if they wanted to produce a batch of Aerochrome. They would have to make more manual QC after full production, with higher QC time and labour, and also more risks of bad batch (cause no control at earlier steps of production). So in the end more expensive film. But can't be more expensive than the 100$ people ask for a roll on eBay lol

  • @Nagria2112
    @Nagria2112 Год назад +239

    as someone from industry its crazy how much depth he shows.
    obviously he doesnt share trade secrets but he is very very close to it and i love it.
    high industry is amazing - i work in pharma.

    • @covodex516
      @covodex516 Год назад +10

      same here, just in the diagnostical branch of a pharma giant. I'm a chemical technician doing lab scale synthesis of peptides. I can't imagine someone with a camera being allowed to film our most important processes, thats just not something our branch likes in general it seems.

    • @bubbly6379
      @bubbly6379 Год назад +3

      @@covodex516 sus

    • @covodex516
      @covodex516 Год назад +2

      @@bubbly6379 super sus but they pay me well

    • @bubbly6379
      @bubbly6379 Год назад +8

      @@covodex516 on the point of high industry though, as an electrician it's crazy how much access we get to very very sensitive stuff without any checkups. I've been around machine shops where the companies do government/big company contracts and I'm given nothing resembling an NDA or anything, nor warned to not use a camera. Also we get keys for entire buildings without a second guess. Do y'all keep better tabs? Because I'd recommend it lmao

    • @VEE727
      @VEE727 Год назад +3

      Yeah I would think most of what he's telling would be a "trade secret". I'm surprised he was allowed to share so much. Good for us

  • @davidlanford
    @davidlanford Год назад +30

    This actually puts the price of a roll of film into perspective!

  • @ECM398
    @ECM398 Год назад +16

    As a materials chemistry student who just took a class in solid state chemistry, watching jeff trying to explain core concepts without going way into the weeds was hilarious. Theres so much interesting stuff to cover i bet he could talk for hours about it :D

  • @davidg5898
    @davidg5898 Год назад +99

    The level of access you were granted is impressive. Kudos to Dr. Jeff for imparting so much knowledge!

    • @Furudal
      @Furudal Год назад +1

      Well considering the navy let him board an active duty nuclear submarine, still impressive but three or four levels down from that.

    • @ChillGuy511
      @ChillGuy511 Год назад +4

      ​@@Furudal that was basically for recruitment campaign... that's why the navy gave access...

    • @ywfbi
      @ywfbi Год назад

      @@ChillGuy511 Yeah, I would bet Dustin got a dollar or two for showing them in a positive light.

    • @ChillGuy511
      @ChillGuy511 Год назад

      @@ywfbi I don't think so... Do they do that? The experience he got and the video he got to make would be enough ig...

    • @ywfbi
      @ywfbi Год назад +1

      @@ChillGuy511 I do not know for sure. But the DOD pays big money to Hollywood for positive movies. "Hollywood military propaganda" returns a lot of results.

  • @gbasilveira
    @gbasilveira Год назад +72

    The amount of thought and design before this factory construction is amazing.
    Thank you and kodak team for sharing such knowledge

  • @jonahbrame7874
    @jonahbrame7874 Год назад +11

    The logistics of this facility is insane. Every time Jeff tried to show a hint of the scale of the complexity of the operation, my brain started to extrapolate and immediately got overwhelmed. This series has been an absolute pleasure to jump down the rabbit hole in.

  • @mdesignz
    @mdesignz 10 месяцев назад +3

    After watching this, I'm amazed that a roll of film doesn't cost $1,000. Thank you for producing this. I'm becoming a patron today!

    • @Redisia
      @Redisia 9 месяцев назад +1

      I am more or less surprised they did not branch off. I worked [not a chemical tech myself, IT related is what i did] in a chemical multinational [22 countries] company and know that they actually branched of into something new right before i left. Kodak has equal (or more) level skilled chemists there... they should expand their horizons if they havent already.

  • @nedj10
    @nedj10 Год назад +47

    The Kodak series is interesting, because Eastman-Kodak invented most of these processes. Which gives a reference point to look at how other countries' film companies, gained the ability to also make photographic film..

    • @user-wc6vb3fn1s
      @user-wc6vb3fn1s Год назад +5

      Well, Kodak didn't invent chromogenic monopack, it is Agfa's invention.

  • @bigskybob
    @bigskybob Год назад +28

    you can tell the depth of knowledge Dr Hansen has with how measured his responses are. Just like you said, he takes you to the edge of your knowledge, shows you there's even more that you don't understand, then explains what you can understand in a meaningful way. What an educator!

  • @alexaguilera8563
    @alexaguilera8563 Год назад +12

    I'm a secondary school student and I'm doing my final year project on the chemistry of photographic film. I've found it quite difficult to find information about this subject and so I wanted to thank the Smarter Every Day crew for making this video as it has really cleared things up for me. Thanks for making us smarter everyday.

  • @Rockin-Roland
    @Rockin-Roland Год назад +7

    As a Rochestarian and the child of a Software engineer that worked for Kodak it’s really cool to see this but also really sad to see what a shadow of a company Kodak is of it’s former glory. The story of Kodak and the city it built is amazing.

  • @Warhorse26
    @Warhorse26 Год назад +5

    I've lived in Rochester for 26 years and never knew how much went into the making of Kodak film. Thanks so much Destin for visiting my city and this deep dive into the chemistry and all the other videos of how this stuff works!

  • @viscache1
    @viscache1 Год назад +8

    As a lifelong film photography devotee I have been totally geeking out on this series. My career was as a physicist but my passion has always been photography. I can read the technical manuals and take a fair picture and God sent me a wife some 40 years ago that doesn’t really care about the technical stuff but she is a brilliant artist with any camera! Doesn’t matter…I LOVE knowing how stuff works! We are all so proud of you, Dustin, when Jeff mentioned ‘Laminar Flow’ you didn’t drop everything and go all geek out! This makes me wonder who can possibly take a ‘Jeff Hansen’s’ position when he retires? The level of professionalism and amazing dedication is getting harder and harder to replace. Dedicated team players are so rare now.

  • @andrewpowers1655
    @andrewpowers1655 Год назад +5

    Literally one of those episodes where learning is fun and I can’t get enough of it.

  • @andreask.654
    @andreask.654 Год назад +26

    I am a photography professional, I grew up with film and understand all of the basic principles, but... Gosh, I had no idea! These facilities are exceeding my imagination of film production by far. Thank you so much for this deep dive. Thanks to Kodak and special thanks to Jeff!

    • @Fish_nipples1998
      @Fish_nipples1998 9 месяцев назад

      Honestly it's amazing. Just how much goes into a roll of film and how absolutely precise they have to be when they're manufacturing that much of it. Honestly surprised that each role of film doesn't cost $50+... A car can impact someone's life greatly or even take a life and automotive manufacturers a lot of times don't even have that level of precision. Truly, astonishing.

  • @stephenbenner4353
    @stephenbenner4353 Год назад +4

    I worked in a photo developing lab in my early 20s and I remember that Kodak film tended to emphasize reds and yellows while Fuji film emphasized greens and blues. (It is notable that their product marketing emphasizes these color differences). I don’t know if I could still tell, but looking at the prints of a full roll of film, I used to be able to recognize Fuji vs. Kodak. I tended to use Fuji because it was less expensive and I tended toward landscape photography which had a lot of greens (plants) and blues (sky), but I’ve always had a special place for Kodak because my great grandmother’s uncle was George Eastman who founded Kodak.

  • @bigskybob
    @bigskybob Год назад +16

    Destin, the re-watchability factor of your videos is off-the-charts. I find myself coming back again and again to your videos which I enjoy the most. The Deep Dive on submarines is fantastic. I've watched the first Kodak video easily 10x and still learn something new each time I watch it. Thank you for the fantastic content. Happy to be a Patron of yours, Destin.

  • @rca6268
    @rca6268 Год назад +5

    My mom was a film chemist at Kodak many years ago. Literally grew up hearing about this stuff on a daily basis, but you finally cemented all of it in a way that makes sense to me! Thanks!

  • @xwingfighter999
    @xwingfighter999 Год назад +14

    I'm a master's student in chemistry and I learned some very cool details about the photochemistry. Dr. Hansen was amazing!

  • @exploresouthwest
    @exploresouthwest Год назад +13

    You can see why Kodak basically makes all the color film stocks for everybody, it's amazing how much work is done to make film.
    Also explains why Fuji is spinning down their factory. It's going to take a lot of demand for film to convince these companies that it's still worth all the effort.

  • @steveskouson9620
    @steveskouson9620 Год назад +2

    My father was a semiconductor engineer.
    (Chemical engineer, really.) I learned as a
    wee youngster, about electrons and holes,
    in a P-N junction. (At a small memory
    manufacturer, in Mt View Ca. I met Gordon
    Moore there, one Saturday. I was 12.)
    I never knew that film had the same process!
    steve

  • @mzaite
    @mzaite Год назад +76

    I had no idea that the silver halide light chemistry is a kind of doped solid state system like a semiconductor using free electrons and “holes”.
    It’s like half photovoltaic and half photosynthesis light reactions and half charged coupled device. In GOO!

    • @sloppydog4831
      @sloppydog4831 Год назад +5

      Yep. It is like photo sensitive microelectronics. A photon hit it and leaves a hole, and then this electron is capture somewhere down the line. The hole is the latent image, for what I understood it.

    • @natefunk1
      @natefunk1 Год назад +5

      @GenericUser That's quantum physics baby!

  • @O2CP
    @O2CP Год назад +11

    For those wondering why there's no Black pigment in CMY camera film, but there is Black in CMYK printing, it's because:
    1. it actually saves a lot of colored ink in printing. By adding black ink in printing (actually dark grey ink...), you can cut down on the three other colored inks if you ever want to reach a black result (instead of going 100% Yellow, 100% Magenta and 100% Cyan, you can go 100% Black and maybe ~10% of each other inks, which makes a lot less ink used).
    2. the color balance is much easier to do and adjust after the fact. While in photography, the photo detectors are created long before the picture is chosen and taken, in printing, you know exactly what you're going to print out before you start pouring ink in the printer. to the point where actually, not all printing is done with CMYK inks. If you know you're going to print out pages where there only two colors (say Orange and Green) then why not just put Orange and Green inks in your printing machine ? And we do.
    3. bleach can't selectively wash out "black" silver traces were there's few and keep it in where there's a lot. You either remove all of the silver or none of it, so you have to make do with the usual subtractive color blending of Cyan minus Magenta minus Yellow to achieve black.

    • @petevenuti7355
      @petevenuti7355 Год назад

      It's the ruthenium and iridium washed out with the silver?

  • @MrQwint22
    @MrQwint22 Год назад +5

    What's absolutely amazing about all of this is that it is the result of almost 200 years of cutting edge physics and chemistry building up on one another; giants standing upon the shoulders of giants. It really isn't all that surprising, I suppose, that film is still chugging along in the digital age when you think about it like that.

  • @huntingstill
    @huntingstill Год назад +10

    I am so impressed with Jeff's knowledge of all of their processes. He seems like an all-around great guy as well!

  • @han5vk
    @han5vk Год назад +68

    Around the 18 minute mark, you mention Bayer filters of digital cameras and how they don't actually capture all colors at the same spot. However there are also digital cameras that work just like the film does, passing light through the sensor die with different wavelength sensitivity at different depths -- most notably, the Foveon X3 sensor.

    • @brianbarrett2487
      @brianbarrett2487 Год назад +4

      Yes...a 1200-2500$ digi camera vs a 10-30$ roll of film

    • @han5vk
      @han5vk Год назад +50

      @@brianbarrett2487 Way to be completely beside the point.

    • @rickkwitkoski1976
      @rickkwitkoski1976 Год назад +10

      @@brianbarrett2487 Really??? How much did that film camera/lens cost back when? And the film is an ongoing cost. You are comparing two very different items and have NOT brought in all the parameters.

    • @matthewjohnson1891
      @matthewjohnson1891 Год назад

      Yes! Fujifilm still uses rhat tech in there newer cameras too.

    • @sshko101
      @sshko101 Год назад +9

      Well actually film doesn´t capture all he colours at the same spot, if the light hits a crystal on some upper layer it either bounces off or gives it´s energy to the silver depending on the wavelength. It´s more that there´s no defined square pattern as in bayer filter but the colour overlap is rather random.

  • @soranuareane
    @soranuareane Год назад +2

    I'd watch the full interview. I don't care how many hours it is. I can't get enough of this guy.

  • @Scrizati
    @Scrizati Год назад +33

    This was extraordinary. What an insight in to the process

  • @ThomasGabrielsen
    @ThomasGabrielsen Год назад +2

    I just had to pause it to write this: I love listening to people that love their job and that are proud of what they're making and talk about it with such passion as Jeff does. I'm 54 minutes in now and I'm kind of sad it's only 13 minutes left. To me this is probably the best video you've made, Destin. You ask the questions I would've asked and you try to understand what Jeff explains using your own words, which helps me to understand it better too. I had absolutely no idea that film is so complex. Well done!

  • @versedi
    @versedi Год назад +4

    I love how Jeff is passionate about the process himself.

  • @clinty51
    @clinty51 7 часов назад

    Hey Destin, I watch a lot of your content with both great respect and awe at the information you convey. Firstly to to hear you say Wow with your understanding of technical subjects is epic. The best and biggest takeaway from your series on Kodak, and this video with Jeff, is bigger than the subject. This is a company that literally works to provide a medium to record human history. These super skilled individuals, from the raw material delivery driver to packaging, to produce a final product for the next potential photographic record of some time in future history. I wholly hope that the resurgence of film media continues to grow. Thank you, and Kodak for this tremendous dive into the complex wizardry that enable us to look forward to the shots we record, rather than rely on the gratuitous reward of instant digital pictures.

  • @jackestes44
    @jackestes44 Год назад +2

    I love seeing someone passionate about this work give a tour. They normally take longer because they want to get you to feel just as excited as they are about the topic.

  • @zaccaira4649
    @zaccaira4649 Год назад +1

    Holy moly 3 smarter every day videos in one day.

  • @photoshopace
    @photoshopace Год назад

    Toured Kodak PArk in 1967 as a photo student in Rochester. I certainly was not in depth like your amazing videos. Jeff Hansen is a rock star for us with interest in how film works. This is all fantastic and make me appreciate the 10-15,000 sheets of 4x5 and 8x10 film my studio went thru every year.
    Kodak would sent densitometry and test sheets from a few full batches of film and we would choose the best one for our type of work. They they would cut whatever we mix of sheet sizes we needed. A whole new appreciation for the people of Kodak.

  • @joshgretzky1005
    @joshgretzky1005 Год назад +3

    Man I wish I knew you were on plant would have invited you by where I work at the Kodak Park Fire Department for lunch!

  • @C00LGUYM4X1
    @C00LGUYM4X1 Год назад +13

    Dr. Hansen did a good job of explaining the functional effect of the chemistry even though he didn't get too far into the band theory of the silver halide. Of course, the end product relies on all the other parts of the film in a much more substantial way so I understand the simplification. Very good video yet again. 👌

    • @MeriaDuck
      @MeriaDuck Год назад +3

      And a lot of this discovered by experimentation way before physics and chemistry knew about the quantum mechanics behind photon absorption. Love this 'outtake' of an hour of chemistry geekery.

  • @Awesomepotamus
    @Awesomepotamus Год назад +3

    I'd like to thank Jeff and his team for taking the time to show us such a fascinating process and sharing their knowledge with us.

  • @MakeSomething
    @MakeSomething Год назад +12

    I loved this. You were right, he was great at taking the explanations to the edge of my comprehension. Also, the cameraperson in me kept saying this must have been so difficult to shoot!

    • @shadow7037932
      @shadow7037932 Год назад

      That's how you know they are good at their job.

  • @turnbullelectronics2229
    @turnbullelectronics2229 Месяц назад

    Justin. Thanks for doing this. I worked for Toledo Scale from 1980 to 1990. I have seen many industrial products manufactured. I installed and maintained Batch system scales for companies like EI DuPont, Reichold chemical, Marian Laboratories, Bayre Laboratories, Caterpillar Tractor, and a multitude or other companies. However, nothing compares to the Chemistry of creating film in your video. I was an avid photographer in high school and developed many rolls of film and prints for our yearbook. I never realized how much chemistry was going on when doing this even though our darkroom was adjacent to the chemistry lab. Mind blowing. John Turnbull

  • @hobokenjoe30
    @hobokenjoe30 Год назад +5

    Man I miss Kodak. Growing up in the shadows of Ridge Ave this company was the life force of the city. Heck even working in a few of Kodak's buildings as an engineer, even though it wasn't a Kodak company, was like a life goal for me.

  • @NerrdHerrd01
    @NerrdHerrd01 Год назад +3

    Wow. I don’t think I’ll retain most of this information but it was so enjoyable to listen to. This series inspired me to buy an old film camera and I love it. I still go to every thrift store in town to track down film cameras that others throw out. It’s a hobby I didn’t know I had until I learned about it. This is what the internet is for!

  • @scanadian4735
    @scanadian4735 Год назад +1

    This series has been amazing, as well as you and Jeff I don’t know why but this was better than watching an action film and kept me on the edge of my seat the hole time. I allso do not think iv ever absorbed this much information in such a short time at any point in my life. I love it and keep up the good work

  • @TrevorDyck
    @TrevorDyck Год назад

    This whole series is so incredible. Thanks Destin for putting this together to share and thanks to everyone at Kodak for sharing their knowledge and insights.

  • @SplicesAndCelluloid
    @SplicesAndCelluloid Год назад +3

    Jeff is friggin awesome! I can't imagine how much fun you had with this trip.

  • @kzil
    @kzil Год назад +1

    Absolutely amazing video and Jeff is incredible. Please don't stop doing in-depth stuff like this!

  • @human_brian
    @human_brian Год назад

    I said this on the main video that goes with this one but I am super glad I'm a patron of this channel because the amount of super high quality content is just staggering. Keep up the good work, Destin.

  • @one-man-band
    @one-man-band Год назад +3

    Your videos are excellent and your work on education is highly appreciated. Thank you for staying curious and sharing with us.

  • @octorok7412
    @octorok7412 Год назад

    I think what makes videos like this so great are how good the questions are that Destin asks. Like I know I wouldn't ask such questions, if any at all. I'd just listen and try to process it myself. But Destin asks questions constantly that look to fully understand what was said and it helps with grasping what is being explained by these people he is talking to. I really appreciate that.

  • @paulkesaulya7997
    @paulkesaulya7997 Год назад

    I’d learn anything from Jeff!
    I could only understand parts of what they’re talking about, but im three videos in and I can’t stop.
    This is blowing my mind.

  • @KiddsockTV
    @KiddsockTV Год назад +5

    I can understand that whole confusion about the different layers of CMY and how does cyan "light" get through the yellow and magenta. BUT it is just photons. JUST PHOTONS! (Put that on a TShirt!) Could you imagine how busy this place was 25, 30, 40, year ago. Amazing!!

  • @jaredkinneyjr
    @jaredkinneyjr Год назад +2

    I've been waiting & waiting for this part 2 for months!

  • @miinyoo
    @miinyoo 10 месяцев назад

    There really is no substitute for nearly a hundred years of experience with Kodak. From the science to the methodology, and sheer complexity of variables, it reminds me more of semiconductor fabrication than anything else. Stupendously fascinating especially when you're a big fan of film footage as the raw stock to shoot dramatic productions.
    I am always thankful to the purists in the film industry who stick to their guns. For all the flaws film has in image reproduction, there is just something natural about them and it all boils down to what this guy is teaching us. Just incredible.

  • @noahreeverts465
    @noahreeverts465 Год назад

    Super fascinating! Great series Destin! I love it when people are stoked about what they do.

  • @davidquirk8097
    @davidquirk8097 Год назад

    Thank you so much for this video series and a huge thank you to Jeff for sharing his knowledge and passion. It is truly a privilege to be allowed into this sort of facility and to have a person with so much knowledge and the ability to share an incredibly technical process in terms that we can all understand.

  • @paolociccone
    @paolociccone Год назад

    Thank you so very much for making this series of videos.I watched all of them. I've been going back to film gradually and every day is filled with more wonders about film but this series about Kodak had been such an eye opener. We are extremely lucky to have such valuable documentary about the magic and art of film. This is very inspiring. I cannot thank you enough for making this series and I'm extremely thankful to Kodak for being so open and let us look inside their magic kingdom.

  • @kylegellner8687
    @kylegellner8687 Год назад

    Hearing about "latent image" and "reciprocity failure" took me way back, as did the D log e curves. I started with B&W photography back in 1969 when I was in high school, and have loved the smell of Kodafix ever since. Thank you, Dr. Jeff Hansen and Dr. Hollis Todd (wherever you are)!

  • @DAVE_WHITE
    @DAVE_WHITE Год назад

    Finally.... Been waiting for part 2 for a while!!!

  • @georgewilson6232
    @georgewilson6232 Год назад

    Destin this is an absolutely brilliant video, you're so right there's hardly any info on film chemistry online! I've always wanted to go more in depth about how the chemical processes work and this sure has delivered - thanks so much

  • @ThePaulWilliams
    @ThePaulWilliams Год назад

    Thanks for sharing this, Destin. What an amazing process to document and with such a fantastic guide!

  • @Bikelessmanklr650
    @Bikelessmanklr650 8 месяцев назад

    I can't tell you how much this video helped me understand the Kodak plant processes. I am going to visit the plant next week for work, and this set of videos saved me so much time in learning the process. Youre explanations were amazing! Great job! I hope to meet Jeff as well. I'll thank him again for his excellent tour.

  • @bobstay1
    @bobstay1 Год назад

    I'd just like to say, thank you so much to all the people involved in making this series of videos: Destin and your guys for taking the time and trouble, Jeff Hansen for your time and knowledge (both the science and navigating around this huge plant!). All the technicians who appeared and talked about their jobs, and the nameless people behind the scenes at Kodak who decided to allow this to be seen by the masses on RUclips. Thank you all. It's fascinating, and enlightening, and mindboggling, and wonderful that such material can be found on the internet in this age of 90 second attention spans.

  • @draco_2727
    @draco_2727 Год назад

    This series has been AMAZING!!! and Jeff I have no words for him other than to thank him for being such an awesome host.

  • @chocomental
    @chocomental Год назад

    I'm really enjoying the kodak series so far, looking forward to the 3rd part! thank you for making this.

  • @alexz1104
    @alexz1104 Год назад +1

    Man this Kodak series has been such a wild ride. What an amazing peek behind the curtain thank you for making this happen!

  • @Juni_Dingo
    @Juni_Dingo Год назад +6

    Why do I feel that they only make 127 emulsions because their software stores the emulsion ID as a signed 8-bit integer? x3
    Jokes aside, this was an amazing insight into the workings (and making!) of the emulsions, I could listen to Dr. Hansen all day...Thank you!

  • @ywfbi
    @ywfbi Год назад

    Loved this Dustin!
    Very interesting, top marks :)

  • @jasperdegrood
    @jasperdegrood Год назад

    I'm am 7:26 seconds in! And teers of jo are filling my eyes. Jeff is an educator like no one else, not demanding you to learn but making you want to learn more and deep dive in the beauty of this chemistry. Thank you Destin.

  • @eherrmann01
    @eherrmann01 Год назад

    This is so fascinating! Thanks for doing this series. Kodak has been a huge part of photographic history, and their story should be preserved.

  • @Colbasaurus23
    @Colbasaurus23 Год назад

    This is honestly mind blowing. Have not been this engaged in learning about a topic for a long time!

  • @derekfloyd398
    @derekfloyd398 Год назад

    This video is probably my favorite of yours so far. Getting a deep dive into this process is so fascinating. Coming from the controls and instrumentation industry, I was giddy the whole timing seeing all of the transmitters, valves, hmi, and such. Those flowmeters at the end were all Coriolis flow meter. If you were able to do a whole channel like this on in-depth process in manufacturing plants I would watch every single one! I appreciate your enthusiasm for engineering and science!!

  • @nickjohnson410
    @nickjohnson410 10 месяцев назад

    This is amazing. Going out of your way to add this to a readily accessible public record is out right win for humanity. Thank You!

  • @aCeruleanStateMusic
    @aCeruleanStateMusic Год назад

    Love that dude, these videos are very interesting!

  • @Cone_A_
    @Cone_A_ Год назад +5

    If you want to learn more about film (Destin or any viewer) Technology Connections had a good series on film that taught me about silver halide before I got here.

  • @noisebe
    @noisebe Год назад

    The best video I've ever seen about industry. Thanks for what you do Destin, continue like this...

  • @petevenuti7355
    @petevenuti7355 Год назад

    I commented yesterday on your other video that I clicked because I hoped to see the chemistry. Wow, you must have been uploading this when I commented! Awesome!!
    Thanks for all you do!!!!

  • @arnekristian5704
    @arnekristian5704 Год назад

    Thank you for making this quality content. I love it!

  • @AlaskaSkidood
    @AlaskaSkidood Год назад

    Dr Hansen is a great teacher, but you're also a great student. Asking great questions, repeating back what you have understood. Thank you for sharing - This is awesome!

  • @Rom2Serge
    @Rom2Serge Год назад

    This gentleman is amazing. As a photographer but more as a film enthusiast i would give so much to have his understanding of film chemistry.

  • @blueline15
    @blueline15 Год назад

    There is so much knowledge in Jeff’s head. He truly knows the chemistry inside and out. Incredible.

  • @dvdsarescary
    @dvdsarescary Год назад

    This is unbelievably cool, love how clearly this guy explains this extremely complicated process.

  • @MrGlotzTV
    @MrGlotzTV Год назад +3

    I was surprised how much goes into making a film (like I didn't expect them layering different sizes of crystals for light intensity). Jeff is great at explaining!

  • @67praab
    @67praab Год назад +1

    I worked in building 30 for 18 years. I started out in Swollen Gel. We would take the dry gel and swell it with water and other chemicals. We worked in yellow light and in cold storage. About 40 F. I then moved onto Dispersion in BLDG. 30 on the 9th and first floor. After that I worked for a short time on the 8th floor in solutions. That was where the bridge connected BLDG 30 with BLDG 38. The last part of my 18 years was in Emulation in Bldg 29. We were running 24/7 and we worked 12 hour shifts. Two days, 24 hours off then two nights with four days off. This was perhaps the best job (I didn't understand it back then) as I have been gone about 15 years. The good news it Rochester is all the buzz now as Kodak is hiring for 35MM film. It seems to be making a comeback. I wish I could go back and finish out my working career at Kodak as I was the forth generation to work at Kodak.
    These videos were a great rememberable trip back in my life. Kodak has meant so much to the Rochester regain. They employed so many people and supported the community is so many different ways. Thank you for doing these videos.

  • @alexbulowski
    @alexbulowski Год назад

    I've been into analogue photography for 10 years now, and I've been developing my own film for 4 years now. This is the most amazing and most into depth video on how analogue film works I have ever seen. As you point out, theories m there's very little information on the internet, and barely any videos, expect for one dutch film from the 50s 😅
    Thank you very much for bringing this to RUclips!

  • @CloudSpecter
    @CloudSpecter Год назад

    Amazing video! Dr. Jeff Hansen this guy is awesome i just can't stop listening

  • @ninjarooster9258
    @ninjarooster9258 Год назад +2

    This video just got me through the work day!

  • @MasterChrister
    @MasterChrister Год назад

    Super interesting episode! The knowledge this guys has is just amazing.

  • @deanlewis4622
    @deanlewis4622 Год назад

    WOW, Destin, WOW! RUclips’s best video of the year!

  • @jum5238
    @jum5238 Год назад

    I didn't understand a lot of the contents of this video, but still gave it a thumbs up for the presentation (and kudos to recognizing how he was teaching you!), but I read many of the comments below from many disciplines, and the enlightenment is so infectious! This is an excellent presentation! Truly becoming "smarter every day"!

  • @KhaledSelim
    @KhaledSelim Год назад

    the details and the number of machines and processes .. amazing
    and Jeff is an excellent presenter .. such a nice experienced guy

  • @EastmanView
    @EastmanView Год назад

    This is the coolest, thank you Destin!

  • @everydreamai
    @everydreamai Год назад

    Great video. Jeff is really a great explainer! He also really seems to enjoy sharing his work.

  • @jima1135
    @jima1135 Год назад

    I grew up less than an hour from this factory complex and always marveled at its size. It is great to see what has actually been going on in there. Thanks Destin and, of course, Dr. Jeff!

  • @wizard_vvs
    @wizard_vvs Год назад

    Absolutely amazing video! Some parts I'd watches two times.

  • @ScenicDepot
    @ScenicDepot 5 месяцев назад

    This is one of the most interesting educational videos I have ever come across. My background was primarily in graphic arts pre-press darkroom work forty years ago (now obsolete), but this gives me a much better understanding of what was going on.

  • @JM-wr2fo
    @JM-wr2fo Год назад

    This was fantastic, I could listen to Jeff all day.

  • @Ben_R4mZ
    @Ben_R4mZ Год назад

    The fact that I know fully understand how this process works is a testament to this guys teaching skills, especially his ability to freaking complex subject down into something a general audience will be able to understand.