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110 is a film format used for still photography. The image size is fixed at 13 x 17 mm. There is one registration hole per image. Movie film formats Amateur formats: 8 mm Single-8 Super 8 mm Polavision 9,5 mm film 17. ...
Lens and mounting of a large format camera Photography is the process of making pictures by means of the action of light. ...
In computer vision, sets of data acquired by sampling the same scene or object at different times, or from different perspectives, will be in different coordinate systems. ...
The film is fully housed in a plastic cartridge, that also registers the image when the film is advanced. There is a continuous backing paper, and the frame number and film type is visible through a window at the rear of the cartridge. The film does not need to be rewound, and is very simple to load and unload. The film is pre-exposed with frame lines and numbers, a feature intended to make it easier and more efficient for photofinishers to print. The 110 cartridge was introduced by Kodak in 1972 together with their Pocket Instamatic cameras. The new pocket-sized cameras became immediately popular, and in a short time displaced competing subminiature cameras, such as the Minolta 16 series, from the market. Eastman Kodak Company (NYSE: EK) is a large multinational public company producing photographic equipment. ...
1972 was a leap year that started on a Saturday. ...
The Kodak Instamatic series of inexpensive, easy to load cameras was introduced in 1963, and featured an easy load film cartridge and initially, a pop-up flash holder. ...
Konica Minolta Co. ...
Canon, Voigtländer, Minox, Rollei, Pentax, Minolta and others, as well as Kodak, offered sophisticated and expensive 110 cameras with excellent multi-element, focusing lenses and precise, electronically controlled exposure systems. These cameras were capable of making high quality images on 110 film. Some of these cameras were quite small, and still hold appeal to enthusiasts of subminiature photography. Categories: Stub | Companies of Japan | Photography companies | Companies traded on the Tokyo Stock Exchange ...
Voigtländer is an optical company founded in 1756 by Johann Friedrich Voigtländer in Vienna and thus the oldest name in cameras. ...
The Minox, the archetypal sub-miniature camera, was invented by the engineer Walter Zapp of Riga, Latvia, in 1936. ...
Rollei is a German manufacturer of optical goods, and maker of the Rolleiflex series of cameras. ...
PENTAX Corp. ...
Konica Minolta Co. ...
Subminiature photography is the practice of using unusually small cameras to make photographs. ...
However, the overwhelming majority of 110 cameras were (and still are) cheaply made, with mediocre lenses and only rudimentary exposure control. The small negative size of 110 film makes it difficult to enlarge successfully, and for these reasons, the 110 format is associated with prints that are often rather blurry and unsharp. This gave rise to the misconception that the cartridge itself is incapable of holding film flat enough for making high-quality negatives. In photography, a negative is a rectangle of material (nowadays usually photographic film) coated with chemicals that, upon photographic exposure, cause the material to record the colors or monochromatic shades of the scene in inverse, negative form. ...
The 110 cartridge, as specified by Kodak, has a plastic tab on one end. Camera designers had the option of using this tab to sense film speed, enabling sophisticated cameras to switch between high and low speed film. A short tab indicated high speed film, and a long tab indicated low speed film. Kodak left it to the film manufacturer to decide which film speeds were high or low. Only a few expensive cameras took advantage of this feature. The designation 110 was originally applied by Kodak to a roll film format introduced in 1898, producing 5" x 4" images. That film was discontinued in October, 1929. Eastman Kodak Company (NYSE: EK) is a large multinational public company producing photographic equipment. ...
The roll film was invented by Eastman Kodak, and was the prime factor in making photography available for the common man. ...
Movie film formats Amateur formats: 8 mm Single-8 Super 8 mm Polavision 9,5 mm film 17. ...
As of the year 2005, 110 is still manufactured by Kodak and others, but is rapidly approaching obsolescence. Eastman Kodak Company (NYSE: EK) is a large multinational public company producing photographic equipment. ...
International standard: ISO 13450 ISO has many meanings: Iso is the stem of the Latin transliteration of the Greek word ίÏÎ¿Ï (Ãsos, meaning equal). The iso- prefix in English derives from this and means equality or similarity. ...
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