I didn't realize that my lovely rosewood Wista DX is so valuable. B&H is listing a new one -- special order -- for nearly $3,000!
I didn't realize that my lovely rosewood Wista DX is so valuable. B&H is listing a new one -- special order -- for nearly $3,000!
In all my history, I purchased two bellows new for my 4x5. Everything else was purchased used. I've never really had a problem with what I've purchased.
Same here -- I've had good luck with used large format cameras, although I bought my Wista new in 1989, and if memory serves, it was about $750 then.
Maybe not what they were going for in '89, but I think with inflation, $750 in 1989 would have the same purchasing power as ~$1500 today. I wonder how B&H sets their pricing for 4x5 cameras (not a criticism - just curious), especially for small companies like Wista. There is no pricing on Wistas website so it's hard to know B&H's margin. Wista's website indicates a H.P Marketing Corp as their US distributor (not sure if that is up to date), so perhaps going direct through them could avoid some sales mark-up. I acquired one from Kumar last year for ~40% B&H's price.
I suppose there are also market considerations that would affect pricing over time. I simply availed to the US Dept. of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) consumer price index (CPI) inflation calculator. But maybe there's a better method for estimating inflation, I don't know.
Welcome to the freaking reality. It would be interesting to find a real culprit for this downlall.
Regardless, I think that beside this, at large we can deduce from he current state of the film photography market - market can bear exactly he amount the buyers are wanting to pay - the sellers are wanting to give up.
And the 45RF is now $9256.99 at B&H. The current distributor is OmegaBrandess, and if you look there, the price is $9867.99. Yes, almost $10K.
What you're seeing isn't really about inflation, it's what you'd expect at the tail end of a declining market, where there are few remaining suppliers of new equipment and those that remain are either in limited production or selling off remaining stock. Under that scenario, the way to extract the maximum value from your remaining stock or your limited production is to price it high, figuring that price-sensitive buyers are going to go with second-hand anyway so you might as well try to extract the maximum profit from those who, for whatever reason, are determined to have new equipment come what may.
Whether OmegaBrandess will be able to get rid of their stock at those prices remains to be seen. At least for the 4x5 wooden cameras, new Chamonix or Shen-Hao cameras will be acceptable substitutes for many of those who want new. The 45RF is a different story - Linhof is the only other game in town for a new 4x5 metal technical/rangefinder camera, and by the time you equip a Master Technika with a viewfinder, it's a couple of thousand dollars more than the Wista.
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