All these prices made me want to cry - until I sat down with my morning coffee and remembered in 1965, sure, I paid CDN$0.50 a roll for Verichrome Pan 120 for my Yashica D, but I was also earning all of $35.00 for a 50-hour week as a cadet news reporter...
Do army surplus stores still exist in North America?? In the 1960s and 1970s I paid absurdly low prices for all sorts of great photo gear in those in Canada and the USA. It seemed every store had several aerial cameras, huge things they were with lenses like astronomy telescopes, for next to nothing.
In 1979 I drove across the USA from California to eastern Canada and back again, visiting almost every Civil War battlefield in the country - according to my travel diary, Kodachrome film (without processing) cost me $3.79 a roll. I had a hundred rolls souped and mounted in a prolab in Arizona for $2.98 a roll. I drove a 1970 Ford Maverick I bought in LA for $500; in June that year there was a gasoline crisis and the stuff hit $1.14 for a GALLON at the pumps. I wasn't into B&W bulk film then, but I recall it was dirt cheap to buy as well as the bulk loaders - now on Australian Ebay the sellers want AUD$200+ for a loader but then it's Ebay, let's not forget that. A parallel universe to ours.
All that nostalgia, sign. I was gobsmacked when I moved to Australia in the mid-'70s and found high prices for anything photographic, the ozbuck was artificially pegged above the US$ worth more then but we got slugged with duty and sales tax for everything imported.
Film, paper and darkroom chemicals are still expensive now but the rest of the world appears to have caught up with us in the notion that in this day and age nothing is really cheap. Que sera sera, as one Doris Mary Anne Kappelhoff said, or rather sang.
Pawn shops were full of interesting things. Speed and Crown Graphic kits, probably ex-newspaper, for <US$100, enlargers at $20 each. The list was seemingly endless. Truly those were the golden years for us. We still live in interesting times but the days of huge bargains in all things photographic are now well and truly past, though I still laugh when I see someone wanting AUD$300 for a clapped-out Nikkormat FTN without a lens on Ebay.
As for used Leica prices, let's not go there, or we will all be bawling our eyes out...