people
There is no specific collective noun form photographic film, in which case a noun suitable for the context is used, for example a roll of photographic film, a case of photographic film, an archive of photographic film, etc.
George Eastman marketed the first roll of flexible photographic film, Eastman Negative Paper, in 1884 which was a coating on a paper base. It was called "stripping film" because the paper backing had to be stripped off during processing. Eastman American Film was introduced in 1885, the first transparent photographic film, "celluloid film" or "nitrate film". Reverend Hannibal Goodwin invented a roll film with a transparent backing that was more flexible and the Eastman company acquired this film in 1889.
Developing photographic film is generally not very expensive. To develop a roll of normal color film, it will cost between $3 and $5.
There are various lengths of prepackaged 35mm film. There are 12 exposure, 24 exposure, and 36 exposure. There are/were also bulk roll film loaders that allowed you to load as many exposures as could fit inside the film container.
Kodak
George Eastman marketed the first roll of flexible photographic film, Eastman Negative Paper, in 1884 which was a coating on a paper base. It was called "stripping film" because the paper backing had to be stripped off during processing. Eastman American Film was introduced in 1885, the first transparent photographic film, "celluloid film" or "nitrate film". Reverend Hannibal Goodwin invented a roll film with a transparent backing that was more flexible and the Eastman company acquired this film in 1889.
The inventor of the 35mm roll-film camera was Oscar BarnackTraditional still-photography developed in the 19th century using large, cumbersome cameras and photographic plates. In the early 20th Century Oskar Barnack, an engineer at the German company Leitz, which made precision optical instruments such as microscopes, and who was a keen amateur photographer decided to do something about the size of the cameras. This was to a large part due to his physical frailty (he suffered badly from asthma and found it difficult lugging the heavy photographic equipment about). He began experimenting with with cinematic film and a light meter which he adapted and improved.At the time cinema cameras shot on 35mm film with a frame size of 18x24mm. Barnack found that this format produced poor quality still photographs and he doubled the frame size to 24x36mm. Originally the film was supplied on large reels (known as a roll) and had to be cut into manageable lengths and placed in the camera in absolute darkness but as the popularity of the format increased, re-loadable film cartridges were developed and eventually companies such as Agfa and Kodak began supplying the film to photographers in single-use cartridges.With the development of the film cartridge the phrase 'roll of film' migrated to mean a cartridge of 35mm film. Over the years other formats and systems were spawned including medium format roll-film, 110 cartridge, Minox miniature format, APX and disk but thanks to the vision of Oskar Barnack and the versatility of the format he created the humble 35mm roll of film is the only one to stand the test of time.
George Eastman marketed the first roll of flexible photographic film, Eastman Negative Paper, in 1884 which was a coating on a paper base.The availability of flexible film allowed Thomas Edison to develop the motion picture camera in 1891, 7 years later.
You would need a specialized scanner designed specifically for scanning film. Yes, they are extremely expensive. However, most photo labs will scan your roll of film for a small price.
George Eastman (1854-1932) was an inventor, corporate leader, and philanthropist. He invented a practical roll form of photographic film in 1884, and founded the Eastman Kodak company. He popularized photography with early hand-held box cameras. His company controlled the vast majority of the US photographic film industry for most of the 20th century. In the development of the cinema, he is often credited alongside Thomas Edison, the Lumiere brothers, Leon Bouly, and George Melies. He invented "roll film" paving the way for others to invent motion pictures.
A film roll camera plays movies but to make a movies is to druw many pic and put it on the film roll camera
Unfortunately, you can't. The Polaroid 900, manufactured from 1960-1963, used 40-series roll film that was discontinued in 1992. Some people have had success converting the camera for use with 100 Pack film (instant exposure) or standard 120 roll film, but claim results are only acceptable. The conversion is permanent and destroys any collectible value the camera may have.