How Dale Farkas Built a Photo Lab that Endured for 50 Years
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A photo lab is a lot more than chemistry, scanners, and printers. It’s a discipline. In this episode of the Dead Pixels Society podcast, we are joined by Dale Farkas of Dale Laboratories in Hollywood, Florida. He lays out the principle that quietly separates labs that last from labs that fade: the difference between quality and quality control. Great prints are not an accident, and consistency is not a “nice to have” when your customers are trusting you with once-in-a-lifetime images.
Farkas traces his path from RIT and motion-picture lab work to a true garage-style start, then into rapid growth when he spots a market vacuum and commits to serving it. Along the way, he explains how labs shifted from optical printing to digital printing, why technician judgment still matters for color correction, and what it takes to run a modern workflow that stays predictable under load. If you care about film processing, mail-in film developing, professional photo prints, and the real-world mechanics behind lab reliability, this conversation is packed with practical insight.
The discussion also addresses industry pressure points: silver halide photo paper supply, Fuji paper choices, inkjet durability, and why customers respond to a print’s “wow factor” even when they can’t name the technical reason. Farkas closes with an open invitation to buyers interested in a turnkey photo lab operation and what the next chapter looks like for him.