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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 film cameras compatible with 35mm film types. These cameras capture congruent shots that take up half of each individual frame in the roll of film.
The Olympus Pen F, Pen FT and Pen FV are very similar half-frame 35 mm single-lens reflex (SLR) cameras with interchangeable lenses produced by Olympus of Japan between 1963-1966 (Pen F), 1966-1972 (Pen FT) and 1967-1970 (Pen FV). The original Pen F has a double-stroke film advance and a distinctive logo rendered in a gothic font.
The Olympus PEN-F is a mirrorless interchangeable-lens camera in the Micro Four Thirds system, released in 2016. It is the part of the digital PEN series. The PEN-F pays tribute to the similarly named PEN F half-frame 35mm film SLR camera from 1963.
The 2016 Olympus PEN-F pays tribute to the old 1960's PEN F-series half-frame cameras with its name and design. There is one more model in the Digital PEN range, which does not really fit any of these categories. It is the digital PEN-F from 2016. It pays tribute to the above-mentioned old PEN F half-frame SLR. These cameras look alike as well.
135 film in "half-frame" cameras Minox: cartridge 1938 Present 8 × 11 mm 15, 36 or 50 nominally 9.5 mm-wide stock (in reality 9.2–9.3 mm) Karat cartridge 1936 1963 Early AGFA cartridge for 35 mm film Rapid cartridge 1964 1990s 24 × 24 mm 18 × 24 mm 12 16 AGFA cartridge for 35 mm film (replaced Karat, same system) SL cartridge 1958 1990
The Diana Mini Camera is a plastic box camera that utilizes 35mm film, and is a part of a long line of lomographic cameras known for taking photos vibrant in color with deep saturation and vignettes shot through a plastic lens. [2] It is capable of taking 72 exposures per roll of film in "half-frame" mode and 36 exposures in "square" mode.