(Q1051557)

English

135 film

photographic film format provided in a cartridge, also known as 35 mm film from the width of the film strip; most common analog (chemical) film used during the era of analog photography by both amateur und professional photographers

  • 35mm film

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Film Fujifilm SUPERIA 200.jpg
3,200 × 3,280; 2.28 MB
The standardized 135 film cartridge (here from Fujifilm) with the beginning of the film strip, which was put/clamped onto a corresponding spool in the camera. The cartridge and name "135" was invented by Kodak in 1934 and became a worldwide standard (ISO 1007). (English)
135film.jpg
400 × 287; 48 KB
Film strip of 135 film with a ruler indicating the width of 35 mm. This is the film after it was chemically developed in a (typically commercial) photo laboratory, one can see the colour inverted single photographs (called "negative") of the pictures taken. (English)
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135 film cartridge from Agfa, with small plastic canister/can in which it was sold, additionally boxed in a small cardboard packaging (English)
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Strip of already developed film with one photographic negative in the standard format 24 mm x 36 mm. For paper prints of the photos, the colours were inverted again to obtain the colours of the original scene. (English)
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Olympus XA 5316.jpg
3,000 × 2,000; 1.04 MB
Film cartridge from Kodak together with a typical compact camera for 135 film from Olympus (1980s) (English)
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135 film
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