Stuff I Got For Christmas 1977 - The Kodak Handle

in #retro7 years ago (edited)

The Kodak Handle first appeared in 1977. In some countries it was called the Kodak EK2.

handle1.jpg
Photo by Terri Monahan (CC BY-SA 2.0) via Flickr found here

Kodak had entered the instant film market in 1976 in direct competition with Polaroid. Kodak had produced all of Polaroid's instant film during the 1960s, but Polaroid began manufacturing their own film in the early 1970s. This probably contributed to Kodak's decision to enter the instant camera market. Kodak had lots of experience in this field, so why not compete directly with Polaroid? Kodak's instant camera technology had several advantages over Polaroid. Polaroid used a mirror to reverse the image onto their film, which added some complexity to the design. Kodak simply flipped their film around and exposed the image backwards -- no mirror required to accomplish the same thing. Another advantage was batteries. Polaroid packed batteries into their film to power the camera. This was convenient for the photographer because they never needed to replace batteries in the camera. However, it was a waste of materials and it also meant Polaroid's film was more expensive than Kodak's. Furthermore, if you had a very old Polaroid film, the batteries might be dead when you went to use it.

handle2.jpg
Photo by Terri Monahan (CC BY-SA 2.0) via Flickr found here

The Handle was a fairly large and clunky camera. As the name implies, it had a big handle on one side. The viewfinder sat above this handle. The shutter was triggered with a blue slider on the right-hand side of the camera that you pulled. Unlike Polaroid photos which were pushed out of the camera with a motor, the Handle had a hand crank on the upper right-hand side that you manually turned to retrieve each photo. The film was called Kodak Instant Print Film and each pack contained ten shots. Shots measured approximately 7cm x 9cm. Picture quality -- not fantastic.

I received my Kodak Handle for Christmas in 1977. It was the same year I received Blip. I seem to recall the 10-pack films costing $7, which was outrageously expensive at the time, but my mother happily bought me film after film. I took hundreds of photos with this camera over the next four years.


This is a shot of my cat Brainy taken with my Handle in the spring of 1980. The quality is not bad:

1980-spring-brainy.jpg


Below is a typical over-exposed indoor shot taken with a flash. This is my brother giving me a DIY haircut in 1979 (... don't ask):

1979-DIY-haircut.jpg


Generally, the quality of indoor shots was poor. Closeup shots were over-exposed and other shots were often under-exposed -- you rarely hit the sweet spot, but here is one shot where I did. This is my cat Brainy plotting how to eat our budgie:

1979-summer-brainy-with-bird.jpg


Finally, here is an early selfie from 1981. This is me in a mirror holding my Handle. Nice disguise, eh? Two shots of me in this post alone, but I still remain anonymous on Steemit!

1981-spring-early-selfie.jpg

Considering how crazy this camera seems now, I had lots of fun with it and captured 4 years of photos chronicling my childhood. Unfortunately, I no longer have this camera. It got lost somewhere along the way. However, I have all the photos. Yay!

More "Stuff I Got For Christmas" posts to follow. We're getting into the really sweet merch now!

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nice pictures nice post nice cat all is nice

I was 1 in 1977 so I probably got clothes :P What you got is way cooler!

Lol! Maybe your parents have a picture of you in your new sleeper taken with their Handle.

Oh yes! I've seen some pics of me in a sleeper. Vinyl foot bottoms and all. I think those pictures were taken with an Instamatic though!

I think the sleeper for grown-ups is the next big thing.

In fact, I'm going to do a post on that just to get the ball rolling.

"Typical over-exposed indoor shot taken with flash" made me crack up. Somehow that also perfectly describes my childhood photos...taken in the get the film developed at Sam's Club days. Oh the traumas of flash photography.

Sophia

Very cool! I've been gifted some Polaroid pictures of my gf and myself and I still have it. In the days of digital photograph, there's something nice and nostalgic about having a physical picture in your hand.

It is wonderful camera ..I will buy camera ..Thanks you sharing this post ..

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