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Half-frame camera

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An Olympus Pen F half-frame SLR
Half-frame film (left and right) with standard 35 mm (centre)

Half-frame cameras, also called single-frame or split-frame cameras, are analog cameras compatible with 35mm film types. These cameras capture congruent shots that take up half of each individual frame in the roll of film. They can be still frame or motion picture cameras and are the standard format of 35mm movie cameras. This is commonly expressed, more technically, as 18×24 mm using 18×24 mm of a regular 135 film. It is closer to the normal frame size of a 35 mm motion film. This leaves half frame cameras to derive their film plate size from the aspect ratio, and frame size that was first designated by Thomas Edison (24.89 by 18.67 millimetres or 0.980 by 0.735 inches) at the dawn of the motion picture industry.[1] Traditionally, the additional film width on motion picture film is used for audio in later film standards, although the original patent for sound on film is derived from the 1880s.[2]

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Transcription

General context

For still cameras using 35 mm film, the usual format of 35mm film size is 24×36 mm, however, half-frame cameras take 18×24 mm only, so, while a roll of 36 photos with 35mm size film for a normal camera can take 36 images; a half-frame camera, can take 72 images, since it only takes half size for each frame (18×24 mm only).

Therefore it is called "half-frame" as it exposes half of the film plate size of 35mm stills cameras, despite its similarity in width to 35 mm film when used in motion picture cameras.[1] Half frame came into vogue as a shooting experience as a cheaper option to full frame cameras in the 1960s. This trend developed mostly out of Japan.[3] The half frame trend began its origins with cameras such as the Olympus Pen models.[3] Half frame cameras allowed for more compact cameras to exist alongside full frame cameras, particularly in rangefinder styled cameras, due to the lack of a traditional mirror, instead using a much smaller, "rangefinder" styled mirror, along with the smaller frame size and therefore smaller lenses required. The smaller lenses could cover the smaller imaging circle.[4] This resulted in far smaller cameras such as the Olympus Pen cameras.[5]

Meanwhile, in the 1960s, along with a growing list of smaller full frame cameras, such as Kodak, with the Kodak Instamatic in 1963, the concerns about the economic benefits of half frame photos began to appear.[6] While allowing 72 shots on a standard 36 shot roll seemed economically beneficial, when taken into account of the reduced image quality, the benefits did not provide the average photographer with the better shooting experience they may have been looking for.[6] This would also become true for many other formats including 110 film and APS film that attempted to and failed to augment 35 mm film.[6] However unlike APS, as a separate format, half frame survives as it can be shot on standard 35 mm film.[7] On half frame cameras this can still be achieved today by using modern film produced by companies such as Fuji and Kodak in the 35 mm format.

Due to the fact that half frame cameras use standard 35 mm film stocks, "half frame" continues to exist as a niche photographic format to the present date for diptych photography.[8] The irregular frame markers and its novelty of exposing two frames on one slide or negative has led to the growth of half frame cameras as a diptych format.[8] The diptych format allows photographers to convey meaning through multiple images in one frame.[6]

The nature of the exposures of a half frame camera also, however, means that they have a vertical (portrait) orientation as opposed to the horizontal (landscape) orientation of a 35 mm SLR or rangefinder. The exceptions are cameras that were sold at the time that chose to use vertically run film mechanisms (examples including the Konica Recorder and Belomo Agat 18).

The necessity to hold a half frame camera in portrait orientation to take a landscape photo did not always align with consumers' choices for numerous reasons, but predominately ergonomic factors. The half frame camera can be seen as defying traditional camera ergonomics often due to the nature of having to hold the camera vertically to take a horizontal shot leading to rejection of the format through confusion. Although more recently through social media, the portrait aspect has been seen as beneficial, particularly with Instagram changing from the 1:1 aspect ratio to 4:5 and 9:16 to fit more image on a phone/tablet device. The 3:4 aspect ratio of half frame photos can easily be cropped to 4:5 in portrait orientation without a significant reduction in image quality producing an "Instagram ready" photo shooting experience among younger photographers using half frame cameras. This has been reinforced by Kodak's reintroduction of half frame cameras[9] through the Kodak Ektar branded H35 half frame camera.

Technologically, the most advanced electronic half-frame camera designed as such from its design inception is the Yashica Samurai single lens reflex.[10] Although, the earlier Olympus PEN and Konica Auto Reflex reached a pinnacle for mechanical half frame cameras, from the 1960s onwards, by offering fully functional rangefinder styled options such as the Olympus Pen and SLR options respectively they remain popular among film shooters today.

A Konica Auto Reflex full/half-frame SLR, with hot shoe "eye piece" adapter attached for electronic X flash cable attached units or manual bulbs.

The Konica Auto Reflex can also switch between full and half frame while shooting. The Auto Reflex SLR gives access to the full Konica AR lens library in half frame, and additionally Nikon F, M42, and Leica M mount with adapters under the provision of stop down metering. Konica at the time created a camera with some deliberation, so that due to its lens flange register, and therefore mount distance, it could be used by photographers from other brand manufacturers with simple lens mount adapters. The diversity in technology showed that multiple manufacturers would try to define their specific visions for the half frame format at the peak of half frame cameras.

In other usage cases, for half frame cameras, for some specific needs, there were cameras originally designated for use as full-frame cameras that were produced or custom modified in very small production runs as half-frame models, for example some Leica (1950 made in Canada Leica 72), Nikon (1960–61 Nikon S3M 18x24mm rangefinder, Nikon FM2 SLR), Konica (FT-1 Pro Half) or Robot (Robot 24x24mm camera) rangefinders, and some Alpa (Alpa 18x24 SLR) and Minolta SLRs.[11] These limited production run cameras are mainly of interest as collectibles rather than daily use cameras. Due to scarcity value these cameras attract more value as a stock commodity than as a commonly used camera. In other cases, the smaller size of the cameras at the time, coupled with the increase in image quality saw half frame as a viable replacement option for the 110 film format.[citation needed]

External links

References

  1. ^ a b Belton, John (1992). Widescreen Cinema. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. pp. 17–18. ISBN 978-0-674-95261-4.
  2. ^ Fayne, John G. "(History of) Motion Picture Sound Recording" (PDF). The Journal of Audio Engineering Society. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Photography". Popular Science. United States: Bonnier Corporation. 1965. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
  4. ^ Adams, Ansel. 1980. The Camera. The New Ansel Adams Basic Photography Series/Book 1. ed. Robert Baker. Boston: New York Graphic Society. ISBN 0-8212-1092-0
  5. ^ "Focal length and image circle – only images".
  6. ^ a b c d Hirsch, Robert (2013). Exploring Color Photography Fifth Edition From Film to Pixels. New York: Routledge. p. 29. doi:10.4324/9780240813363. ISBN 9781136089749.
  7. ^ "Camera Shows". Popular Science. United States: Bonnier Corporation. 1963. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
  8. ^ a b Hirsch, Robert (2013). Exploring Color Photography Fifth Edition From Film to Pixels. New York: Routledge. p. 150. doi:10.4324/9780240813363. ISBN 9781136089749.
  9. ^ Martyr, Johnny (July 12, 2022). "Kodak Ektar H35 Half Frame Camera Review: Out-Of-The-Box Fun". PetaPixel.
  10. ^ "Keppler's SLR World Samurai: Autofocus zoom half frame SLR!". Popular Photography. Los Angeles: Diamonds Communications Inc. 1988. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
  11. ^ A batch of 30 Minolta X-300 35 mm full-frame SLRs custom modified to half-frame for the police in the Netherlands Forum article in German Minolta-Forum as of 2007

This article was originally based on "Half-frame" in Camerapedia, retrieved at an unknown date under the GNU Free Documentation License.

This page was last edited on 18 October 2023, at 14:41
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