I'd guess late 60's based on the aluminum door to the building; that's sort of common to that era. There's also an air conditioner which might offer some clues; I don't know when window air conditioners came into popularity. If you have other photos of the building you could compare the vine growth on the building too, unless that was perfectly kept at that quantity forever.
I know you love film, but you must not date it. Only date humans.
(I can't help you with the markings, sorry.)
chocolate, flowers, a movie?
Marc!
In any event, I suppose the Kodak edge markings don't tell us much at all, pity. It would have been nice to date the photo that way.
Because Kodak changed edge markings occasionally (at least for the B&W roll films made Rochester for U.S. use), it is possible to roughly date negatives. So far as I can tell from my collection of negatives, Kodak revised the "Kodak Safety Film" lettering around 1960 by placing the "Kodak" within an arrow as shown on your contact sheet. In 1967, Kodak again revised the marking by putting "Kodak Safety" in regular lettering and "Film" in an arrow. Therefore, I am fairly confident that your contact sheet was printed from film manufactured between 1960 and 1966.
Gary
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