Difference between revisions of "126 film (roll)"

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(clarified this isn't Instamatic 126)
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'''126 roll film''' (see also newer [[Instamatic]] [[126 film]]) was introduced by [[Kodak]] in 1906 without a 1xx designation (which were not used until c.1913). It was originally simply ''Number 4A Folding Kodak'' film, after the model it fit. It was discontinued in March 1949.
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''This entry refers to the early 20th-century roll-film format. Kodak re-used the designation '''126''' for its later plastic, drop-in [[126 film]] cartridge, introduced 1963 for its [[Instamatic]] cameras.''
  
The image size was  4¼×6½ inches
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'''126 roll film''' was introduced by [[Kodak]] in 1906 without a 1xx designation (which were not used until c.1913). It was originally simply ''Number 4A Folding Kodak'' film, after the model it fit. It was discontinued in March 1949.
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The image size was  4¼×6½ inches.
  
 
==Links==
 
==Links==

Revision as of 15:30, 1 May 2011

This article is a stub. You can help Camera-wiki.org by expanding it.

This entry refers to the early 20th-century roll-film format. Kodak re-used the designation 126 for its later plastic, drop-in 126 film cartridge, introduced 1963 for its Instamatic cameras.

126 roll film was introduced by Kodak in 1906 without a 1xx designation (which were not used until c.1913). It was originally simply Number 4A Folding Kodak film, after the model it fit. It was discontinued in March 1949.

The image size was 4¼×6½ inches.

Links

History of Kodak Roll Film Numbers