slackercrurster
Member
Back in 1960 the median annual family income in USA was only $5600...you could develop 3027 rolls of Ektachrome with one year median income.The Kodak logo seems to me like it's the one they used in the 1960s. Let's say this was from 1965. Ektachrome processing apparently cost $1.85 back then. Adjusted for inflation, that equals around $32 today. I see that e.g. Blue Moon offers E6 processing for $19. So it has become quite a bit cheaper, overall.
Back in 1960 the median annual family income in USA was only $5600...you could develop 3027 rolls of Ektachrome with one year median income.
Using today's price an median US family income in 2023 of $80600 you could develop 4242 rolls of Ektachrome.
Look at how those numbers track perfectly with the inflation-based estimate I posted. Which of course is not a surprise.Back in 1960 the median annual family income in USA was only $5600...you could develop 3027 rolls of Ektachrome with one year median income.
Using today's price an median US family income in 2023 of $80600 you could develop 4242 rolls of Ektachrome.
The Kodak logo seems to me like it's the one they used in the 1960s. Let's say this was from 1965. Ektachrome processing apparently cost $1.85 back then. Adjusted for inflation, that equals around $32 today. I see that e.g. Blue Moon offers E6 processing for $19. So it has become quite a bit cheaper, overall.
Enjoy your comparatively affordable E6 processing available to you in 2025.
Look at how those numbers track perfectly with the inflation-based estimate I posted. Which of course is not a surprise.
I find the "how much film can I process with my salary, provided I don't rent/buy a house and don't eat" kind of amusing.
Back in 1960 the median annual family income in USA was only $5600...you could develop 3027 rolls of Ektachrome with one year median income.
Using today's price an median US family income in 2023 of $80600 you could develop 4242 rolls of Ektachrome.
My first new car monthly payment was DOUBLE what my parents new house payment was, only 15 years after they had purchased that house.
Maybe we checked different sources on inflation—I found almost exactly a tenfold increase from 1965 to 2024, so the processing is a break-even.
The problem is that what one has to pay for a house is so variable
My parents moved us out to the Vancouver area in 1961, for my Dad to work at the newly opened Kodak Kodachrome and Ektachrome processing laboratory - as Customer Service manager.
Even with a Canadian Kodak manager's salary, my parents found it somewhat challenging to afford the mortgage payments on the $21,000.00 CDN house they bought.
Clearly, that $1.80 should have been higher!
From around the same time, on 828 View attachment 386997
How do you preserve that picture, it still has beautiful colors. although there are some micelliums or marks but it's way better than my newer slides.
Nothing special - it is just one of many, many, many Kodak Canada processed Kodachrome slides that I inherited from my Dad and Mom.
They have been kept in boxes, in relatively benign storage locations. They would most likely be faded if they had been projected repeatedly
These slides are incredible. A brief period in history when people have amazing crisp memories recorded in color. All the digital stuff turns to dust.
All my father's Kodachrome slides are in great shape 60 to 75 years on.
Kodachrome endures!
Ektachrome...not so much.![]()
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