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Kodak’s Super 8 Comeback Is Leading A Whole New Wave Of Retro Nostalgia

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We’ve had the vinyl revival – now physical film is now making a comeback. The Kodak Super 8 camera puts a digital spin on a 52-year-old format: “It’s going to change the way Super 8 is used,” says Josh Robertson, a film community manager at Kodak.

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First announced in January 2016, a small number of limited-edition cameras will go on sale later this year for around $2,500, before the $2,000 standard edition is released. Kodak collaborated with San Francisco-based designer Yves Behar to update the trad Super 8 look with a digital viewfinder and angled handle on top. It might seem like a strange balance – a film camera with a digital screen – but Kodak reckons it can attract a new generation of budding producers who’ve only ever shot on digital.

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“Even though you are shooting on analog film, the digital viewfinder allows you to see what is going to be exposed on to it,” says Robertson. The cost of a film cartridge will also include processing and digitalization of footage, which can be uploaded to the cloud for easy editing.

Another big change: sound. Whereas Kodak’s 2016 prototype had a built-in microphone, the final model doesn’t. Instead, there’s an SD card slot, which connects to an external microphone.

The company’s renewed faith in film isn’t without precedent. Oscar-winners La La Land and Fences, as well as Hidden Figures, were all shot on the format, rather than digital cameras. Robertson hopes its Super 8 will appeal to people yearning for a more tangible creative process. “There’s a certain point when we are so bombarded with digital tech that we want to digital detox.”

Kodak’s new super 8 camera via RedShark

Key Features of the new Kodak camera include:

The Hand Grip:
Hold it from the top, or screw a pistol grip into the tripod mount for run-and-gun shooting.
The Film
The Super 8 can shoot on daylight stock, tungsten and black-and-white film at 18 to 36 frames per second.
The Viewfinder
There’s a screen, but no touch controls. Settings are accessed through a toggle wheel on the side of the camera.Do you know anything else about this latest Kodak revamp? Let us know in the comments section below.

SOURCES: (Wired, Youtube)

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