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A Kodak brownie box
Kodak use Nickel-titanium or stainless steel film for x rays.
Kodak brand photo books can typically be purchased from retailers who use Kodak film such as Walgreens, CVS, or RiteAid. They can also be purchased from the Kodak website.
There were cameras before Eastman's Brownie Camera (there was a Kodak Camera before the Brownie, but it was really expensive at $25; the Brownie only cost $1), but they were too expensive and too hard to use for most people. Eastman developed the Brownie so everyone could take pictures.
It was the first of the Kodak cameras, dating from 1888. As far as I know it was simply called the Kodak camera. It was a box camera loaded with enough roll film for 100 exposures. In the very early days one coudln't change the film oneself. One had to send the camera to the Kodak Company (in Rochester NY). The developed the flim, made prints, inserted new film for 100 shots and returned the whole lot to the sender. (The Kodak Brownie was introduced in 1900). Incidentally, the invention of roll film was essential for the development of motion pictures.
Eastman Kodak developed a long-running series of cameras by the name of Brownie. They became the first affordable and easy to use cameras for the everyday population.
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.
In the early 1990s, Kodak stopped making 8mm film for the private market altogether. This made the use of 8mm film, which could only be bought from independent film stores, nearly obsolete.
The ones that are made for filming color - - - - - Just about any color film will work, but portrait photographers who still use film use either Kodak Vericolor III Professional (aka "VPS") or Fujicolor NPS. They're designed to photograph people, they're both rated at ISO 160, and most people who use the stuff pretend the film is really ISO 100. It seems to work best that way.
FILM!
George Eastman Kodak invented roll film and a camera that used it in 1888. Before that, only single shot cameras existed, mostly using glass plates that were difficult to use. As I recall, the camera contained enought film for 100 exposures and had to be mailed away to have the film removed, processed and prints made. Kodak returned the camera re-loaded.
Which kind of film is most likely to use high-key lighting