35MM cameras were the most popular type of camera before digital cameras came into popularity. The definition of a 35MM camera is one which uses film which measures 35MM.
24 x 36 millimeters
The crop factor indicates the size of the sensor. It is relative to the size of 35mm film, also known as Full Frame. Actual size of Full Frame is (36mm x 24mm) To calculate the sensor size you use: [(1 / crop factor) * Full Frame] = [(1 / 1.6) * Full Frame)] = .625 * Full Frame = 22.5mm x 15mm This is very close to the actual size of the APS-C sensor. (23.7mm x 15.7mm)
usually 24 frames per second
it depends how sharp the picture is but with a good body and lens and film and a steady shot it should be no problem to print it on A0 posterformat, but if you want to be shure take the negative to a good photoshop and let tem analyse if a poster A0 size will be sharp
Frame has several related meanings. First, the photo frame you buy from the drugstore or department store. Second, in photo editing it means that a picture is to be cropped and rotated. Third, it can mean a border around the edges of a photo. In video, a frame is one photo in the series of photos that create the motion picture. A frame is one image which lasts (typically) 1/30 of a second. 1/15 and 1/8 second are also common. In 35mm roll film, a frame is one 35mm by 24mm rectangle which is one full sized image or a "full frame." To save film, some compact cameras from the 1950s and 60s used half frame (18mm x 24mm) negatives. The frame counter counts the number of exposures you have left on a roll of film, or on your digital media. In summary, the answer depends somewhat on context.
The firts digital 35mm camera came out in 1984 when the digital 43.7mm came out too.
In digital cameras, full frame usually refers to a Digital Single-lens Reflex camera with a sensor roughly the same size as a 35mm film frame (36 x 24mm).
A 35mm Leica is any camera made by the camera manufacter Leica, that captures the photograph on 35mm photographic film. Some might use the term to describe a Leica that has a digital image sensor with the same size as 35mm film, but a more common term for this is "full frame" Leica.
A 35mm wrench....
The actual 'image' area of the film measures 36mm x 24mm There were three image sizes for 35mm cameras: 24 x 36 "double frame," which is the most popular size and the only size sold today 24 x 24 "square," which was introduced after World War II as a means of giving the photographer more pictures on a roll 18 x 24 "single frame," which is the same size as a 35mm movie camera frame. This is also called "half frame." Half-frame cameras are very collectible. There is also a 24 x 60 (or thereabouts) panoramic format--long, skinny pictures.
35Mm
The crop factor indicates the size of the sensor. It is relative to the size of 35mm film, also known as Full Frame. Actual size of Full Frame is (36mm x 24mm) To calculate the sensor size you use: [(1 / crop factor) * Full Frame] = [(1 / 1.6) * Full Frame)] = .625 * Full Frame = 22.5mm x 15mm This is very close to the actual size of the APS-C sensor. (23.7mm x 15.7mm)
usually 24 frames per second
Passport photos for South Korea should be 35mm wide by 45mm tall. The size of the person's face in the picture should be 25mm by 35mm.
Its the size of the captured image, 35 milimeters.
35mm
35mm by 30mm
35mm