This was CAD designed and manufactured for use with the obsolete 126 film format introduced by Kodak in 1963. 126 film was actually 35 mm in width so technically a Canon 35 mm OEM holder will work with them.
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This was CAD designed and manufactured for use with the Minox sub-miniature film format. It will not work on regular scanners that do not feature the backlight needed to scan negatives. This is a newly designed model that finally allows for.
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The issue is that the "normal" scanning orientation is perpendicular to the scanning sensor on these models. This causes lines and weird colors in your scans. The answer is to scan parallel to the sensor.
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Kodak first created 616/116 film in 1899. It was 70 mm wide and recorded images of 2.5" x 4.25" (65 mm x 110 mm). The format was discontinued in 1984. You may need to cut your film to adapter length for proper use.
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No scanner, no accesories.
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No scanner, no accesories.
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This was CAD designed and manufactured for use with 35 mm film. The issue with this is two-fold. First, my max build is just below the length of most OEM holders. Why not just put my holders straight down on the glass?.
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Custom manufactured film holder for Super 8 mm and Regular 8 mm movie film (Patent Pending). The issue with this is two-fold. First, my max build is just below the length of most OEM holders. Why not just put my holders straight down on the glass?.
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