Yes but the quality of the results may be very poor. Undeveloped film degrades fairly quickly.
3/12= 1/4 So 1/4 of her rolls of film were slide film
There is a 6.667% chance (one in 15) of that happening. Math: p = (3/10)*(2/9) = .06667
The projectionist.
The safest way is to use naphtha on a lint-free film wipe.
No, we don't do that here at Answers.
The movie is projected from computers, not rolls of film.
Hi, we own the 1926 Rolls-Royce that was in the Darling Buds of May. This car is a 20hp Landaulet. The car that was used in the film The Yellow Rolls-Royce was a Phantom, so not the same car.
No, pictures cannot be seen on undeveloped film. The images are only visible after the film has been processed and developed.
between 0.12 and 0.20. As the film gets older the density will get higher. There is a standard out there that limits the usable film "base fog" density to 0.30.
No it can't.
The main differences between developed and undeveloped film are that developed film has been processed to reveal the images captured on it, while undeveloped film has not been processed and therefore does not show any images. Developed film is ready for viewing and printing, while undeveloped film requires processing before the images can be seen.
George Eastman, who founded Kodak. The first cameras with film were produced in the 1890s. However, in the early years the films could not be bought separately and one had to send the camera to Kodak to have the film removed, processed, printed - and to have a new film put in. The whole thing was expensive.