That comes out to 4.25x3.25 inch, I think that was some of the middle sized press cameras. larger than 2x3 and smaller than 4x5. I know there are a few people on here that dabble in that size.
That comes out to 4.25x3.25 inch, I think that was some of the middle sized press cameras. larger than 2x3 and smaller than 4x5. I know there are a few people on here that dabble in that size.
8.2x11.8 cm == 3.228 x 4.646 inches
3 1/4 x 4 1/4 inches == 8.255 x 10.795 cm
Looks like the film is 8.2 x 10.8cm - which would make it a standard size.
I would imagine the (posited) 8.2 x 10.8 cm dimensions are the Japanese specification for what we call "3 1/4 x 4 1/4" and Europe calls 81 x 106.4 mm. Not everything is ISO.
Sheet film in the US is slightly undersized from its ASA dimension to make easily slide into an film holder. After the undersizing the dimensions are likely closer to the JIS and ISO numbers
Unless the box has a printing error, this is definitely not 3x4.
My point is that more than likely the box either has a printing error or the OP's OP has a typo: The film is in reality 8.2x10.8cm, not 8x2x11.8.
The film is bog standard 3.25x4.25" size film - quarter plate, if you will.
that would make sense but the boxes are just ever so slightly smaller than 4x5I have some old Kodak 2-1/4" x 3-1/4" that is packed in the same size box as 4x5, but it is correctly labeled 2-1/4 etc. I guess after a certain point, when sheet film in smaller sizes became a niche product, they just stopped each size getting its bespoke box.
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