I would love to have a modern large format roll-film camera like the vintage Kodak No. 3A Folding Pocket Camera produced in the early 1900s. What cameras are available and what large format roll-films, like the Kodak 122, are available.
There are large format roll cameras made until a few years ago. Two are the Linhof Aero Technika and the Aero Technika EL. Both used either sheet or Super Rollex and Rapid Rollex roll film backs as well as the Techno Rollex back or 5” aerial roll film on modified NATO spools. If you Google Pinky Nelson you can see a picture of him hand holding the EL version with the 5” roll back during a Space Shuttle mission.The second part of this is easy. There is no roll film in production (since about the mid-1970s) larger than 120.
There haven't been cameras made for sizes larger than 120 in much longer than that.
Wouldn't it be great if there was still a mass market for 3A cameras, 122 roll film and pre-printed postcard back Azo in card stock so we could make our own real photo post cards 3 1/2 × 5 1/2.I would love to have a modern large format roll-film camera like the vintage Kodak No. 3A Folding Pocket Camera produced in the early 1900s. What cameras are available and what large format roll-films, like the Kodak 122, are available.
Rollei made a 9” roll film photogrammetric camera. So did Zeiss and many others. These were not necessarily military. Many commercial aerial photographers used the 45 Aero Technika EL for their aerial work. But then so did EG&G for recording tests for the military. The ones on the Space Shuttle were bought for the Shuttle missions by the Navy.Things you learn, apart from the military, I didn't know they had made roll film in large format. I see Kodak made an even bigger folding camera the 4A with 4 1/4 x 6 1/2 inch image. They didn't dare to call it a "pocket" camera. What's next, will someone launch a kickstarter for a Polaroid conversion that uses large format roll film?![]()
Rollei made a 9” roll film photogrammetric camera.
There are large format roll cameras made until a few years ago. Two are the Linhof Aero Technika and the Aero Technika EL. Both used either sheet or Super Rollex and Rapid Rollex roll film backs as well as the Techno Rollex back or 5” aerial roll film on modified NATO spools. If you Google Pinky Nelson you can see a picture of him hand holding the EL version with the 5” roll back during a Space Shuttle mission.
The Library of Congress also used the 5” vacuum roll back on copy stands for duplicating.
No idea what the OP meant...
I find it strange that large format cameras and large format roll-film existed in the early 1900s but it is impossible to find modern ones now.
Linhof Technorama 617 Slll is still a currently made roll film camera.No, please do not misunderstand me.
I already use 120 medium format roll-film in 6x6, 6x7, and 6x9cm cameras.
I also use a 120 medium format roll-film back in my 4x5 inch large format cameras.
I am asking about the availability of large format cameras that would allow me to capture 8x14cm images (or larger) on roll-film.
I find it strange that large format cameras and large format roll-film existed in the early 1900s but it is impossible to find modern ones now.
Not true. After the first shuttle flight on the. Shuttle flight the Navy told us that with the Hasselblads on the Shuttle they could see their was something there. With LInhof they could tell what it was.Strange? What advantage is there to large sizes of roll film for ordinary photography? Yes, military and surveillance applications, where precise heavy equipment can realistically be accommodated, along with massive budgets to match. And as film grain, resolution, and lenses have gotten so much better over time, even 120 roll film will handle more detail than large film once did. Where would be the market? I shoot and print 8x10 and 4x5 personally, and want sheet film per se, as stiff and dimensionally stable as possible. What good would be a roll back heavier when loaded with film than the camera itself? One notable photographer of many several back who did use aerial cameras in the field (as well as in the air) was Bradford Washburn. You might or might not be familiar with him, but the gear certainly wasn't what people typically regard as portable. And at today's large format film pricing, who could afford to machine-gun with it? So the answer is both yes and no. All kind of things can be done. But at what level of cost and effort? At current pricing, 8x10 color film is running close to $30 per shot with processing. I can hardly imagine what a minimum-order spool cut would run. Black and white is nowhere near as bad, but still way more than it was not very long ago.
It’s as close to 8 x 14 cm he is going to find.That's still 120 film, Bob. He clarified his question by stipulating he has something much wider in mind.
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