Kodak EK4 Instant Camera
#kodak#instant-camera#1970s
David Olsson
In 1976, Kodak launched a direct competitor to Polaroid's instant film system. What followed was one of the more consequential patent disputes in photography history. Polaroid sued. After years of litigation, a federal court in 1986 found Kodak had infringed seven Polaroid patents and ordered the company out of the instant photography market entirely. The settlement came to $925 million USD. No Kodak instant film has been manufactured since.

This EK4 is a Canadian market unit with bilingual English/French labeling on the body โ a detail that places it specifically. It cannot be used; the film hasn't existed for nearly forty years. Leatherette lower body intact with no cracking. Silver upper control panel clean with legible markings.
Condition: Untested, sold as-is. Included: Camera only. Canadian market unit, bilingual labeling. Price: $15 CAD. Pickup preferred; shipping available.
The camera that ended in a $925 million settlement. It holds up on a shelf and in conversation.
Listed by dot Emporium. Vintage and rare goods, researched and rendered.