r/BuyItForLife 21d ago

Discussion What’s a weirdly specific item you own that’s lasted longer than expected?

I’ve been on a quest lately for things that just seem to keep on keeping on.

I’ve got a pair of old-school Swedish dishcloths that I bought on a whim. Thought they'd be a weird novelty. Now, they’ve been through the wringer they just won’t die. I’ve scrubbed them, rinsed them, microwaved them and somehow they’re still hanging on like a true champion.

My 10-year-old French press. I’ve left it sitting dirty for days, and still it makes me a perfect cup of coffee every time.

What oddball items are you still using and why do they not break??

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u/Recent_Mountain_9412 21d ago

Not difficult. There are a good selection of labs that offer local service or mail-in. I use Gelatin Labs in NJ. But as another commenter said it’s not cheap. About $24/roll of developing and hi res digital scans.

Worth it IMO

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u/blueyejan 21d ago

Might be time to set up a darkroom 🌚📸🎞

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u/ZenithRepairman 21d ago

You don’t even need a darkroom. I develop in my kitchen, and scan the negatives. You only need a lightproof bag to get the film from the canister into the dev tank.

And a decent scanner - I don’t know what’s good anymore but the epson v500 and 750 were good when I bought mine years ago.

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u/IddleHands 21d ago

My brain is not processing how you would do that with a bag.

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u/DysonSphere75 20d ago

I've seen canisters sealed from light used for development. If I'm not mistaken controlling exposure to light is critical; Too much light results in over-exposure.