Masks are of little use if you have to manually position the film for every frame. .......
I know, and I don't want to sell it to youYou don't have to sell square on 135 film to me. I was waaay ahead of you.
Thanks, important point indeed. I've talked about that today with my local professional lab. They have five different scanners for different purposes, including the Noritsu HS-1800. They told me 24x24 might work with a dedicated mask and dedicated coding. But of course that must be tested, difficult to evaluate in theory.
so do any of the ones that they have manage to do half frame without anything more than a menu selection.
xkaes, if you think a 24mm x 24mm format is "just too weird"
so do any of the ones that they have manage to do half frame without anything more than a menu selection.
Ironically, of those lab scanners, Pakons (all dumped by minilabs a while ago) would probably be the easiest to quickly adapt to scan square format on 135 film at somewhat acceptable speed and manual labour involved.
the mini-labs when 126 was in its prime were "direct to paper" and would have come with a Lens to use for 126, (or used a built in Zoom)I wonder if there are scanners that offer a mode for 126?
Concerning 24x24mm square format in general, I think it could be indeed successful for Pentax to offer a "Pentax 24 square" as a sister model to the current Pentax 17.
Because of the following reasons:
1. The square format has been very popular in photography for decades. Not only in medium format, but also in amateur formats: More than 150 million Instamatic 126 cameras have been sold in a bit less than three decades. And also a high three-digit million number of Polaroid integral instant film cameras, and several million Fujifilm instax square cameras.
The square format has not been as popular as the rectanglar formats, but nevertheless a very significant percentage of photographers like it (and lots of photographers are using both rectangular and square format).
2. "Same parts strategy": Most of the parts of the Pentax 17 can be used for such a Pentax 24 as well. That lowers both design costs and production costs significantly, with improved economies of scale.
3. If Pentax offers a "camera family" based on the Pentax 17 - Pentax 17, Pentax 24, Pentax 35 - it would not also lowers overall costs, but also the total customer base / user base could be increased significantly. It would also be very good from a marketing point of view.
The only real disadvantage I see in 24x24 square negatives in 135 film is that it isn't a recognised standard. Labs are gonna hate it. Those who print or scan at home won't have such problems though.
There are many home scanners where you will have problems with 24x24. The best home scanners for 24x24 are, ironically, the worst for 135 film (flatbeds).
And the problem for young photographers is that they're unlikely to have a flatbed scanner.
The only real disadvantage I see in 24x24 square negatives in 135 film is that it isn't a recognized standard. Labs are gonna hate it. Those who print or scan at home won't have such problems though.
Although I myself have not used the square format very much, I have always noted that one never needs to choose portrait or landscape mode when using a square format camera. This attribute suggests to me that it could be a desirable feature for a point and shoot type of camera.
We might see Kodak Alaris sell 17 and 35mm cameras soon especially since they're under new management. Pentax may private label theirs for them.
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