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  2. 16 mm film - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/16_mm_film

    The variant called Super 16 mm, Super 16, or 16 mm Type W is an adaptation of the 1.66 (1.66:1 or 15:9) aspect ratio of the "Paramount format" [9] to 16 mm film. It was developed by Swedish cinematographer Rune Ericson in 1969, [ 10 ] using single-sprocket film and taking advantage of the extra room for an expanded picture area of 12.52 mm × 7 ...

  3. Minolta 16 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minolta_16

    Minolta 16 refers to a line of 16mm subminiature cameras made by Minolta between 1955 and 1974. The negative size was 10x14 mm for the earlier models, later, a larger format, 12x17 mm was adopted, using single-perforated 16 mm film. It was possible for the user to load cassettes, and also develop the film using a special developing tank with a ...

  4. Keystone Camera Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keystone_Camera_Company

    Keystone Camera Company. The Keystone Camera Company was an American manufacturer of consumer photographic equipment that began in 1919 in Boston. [1] Notable products were Movie cameras, 126 and 110 cameras with built-in electronic flash (the "Everflash" series). In the 1930s, the firm built low cost 16mm cameras that are still in use today.

  5. Ciné-Kodak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciné-Kodak

    The final 16mm spool loading Ciné-Kodak, the K100, arrived in 1956 with both turret and non-turret versions. The mid-1930s saw the beginning of a line of magazine-loading cameras, the Magazine Ciné-Kodaks, made initially in Kodak's Nagel Works in Germany. The 16mm Ciné-Kodaks were well-made, long-lived cameras.

  6. Kodak Cine Special 16mm Cameras - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Kodak_Cine_Special_16mm_Cameras

    The Kodak Cine Special 16mm Cameras (CKS) are a family of precision, versatile, spring-wound 16mm silent movie cameras produced by Eastman Kodak from the 1930s to the 1960s, and intended for advanced consumers and industry professionals. While its rectangular format was typical of earlier Kodak 16 mm cameras (such as Cine-Kodak, Kodak Models B ...

  7. Filmo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filmo

    The Filmo 70 was the first spring motor-driven 16 mm camera. In 1925 the Eyemo, a hand-held 35 mm camera based on the design of the Filmo 70 was offered. It was also spring driven, but could be hand-cranked as well. Bell & Howell introduced the first 16 mm turret camera with its Model C in 1927. A beautifully ornate and much more compact 16mm ...

  8. Krasnogorsk-3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krasnogorsk-3

    Krasnogorsk-3. The Krasnogorsk-3 (Красногорск-3) is a spring-wound 16mm mirror-reflex movie camera designed and manufactured in the USSR by KMZ. A total of 105,435 Krasnogorsk-3 cameras were produced between 1971 and 1993. [1]

  9. Victor Animatograph Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victor_Animatograph...

    The Victor Animatograph Corporation was a maker of projection equipment founded in 1910 in Davenport, Iowa by Swedish-born American inventor Alexander F. Victor. The firm introduced its first 16 mm camera and movie projector on August 12, 1923, [1] the same year Eastman Kodak introduced the Cine-Kodak and Kodascope. Victor advertised through ...