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what "special qualities" does your camera have qhen it's a 35mm?

2006-06-30 00:53:22 · 5 answers · asked by Shabby 2 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Photography

5 answers

35mm is the width of the exposed frame when using this type of film. Technically speaking, it's actually 36mm, but, when printing 0.5mm cutting off from either end is assumed, leaving you with 35mm.

2006-07-02 09:50:31 · answer #1 · answered by Mr. Q 3 · 0 0

35mm camera is the aperture lenth of the lens. The different mm sizes will change the perspective in the image.. The human eye typically sees at 50-55mm 35 is a little more flat of an image and therefore you can get a flatter wide range of information across the image plane. 20mm is even flatter. When you get into the higher mm range things start to distort, for instance if I where to take a picture of a face close up with a 80mm lens, the nose would be really big and the rest of the face small. Higher mm lenses create that comicbook extreem forshortening effect, lower mm lenses are better for creating a more standard look, and 35mm is a standard for that wide image lens... I hope that helps although my explination could use some work, I think that gets to piont across.

2006-07-07 01:17:47 · answer #2 · answered by justin l 5 · 1 0

35mm refers to the size of film the camera takes.

2006-06-30 07:58:53 · answer #3 · answered by qwerty456 5 · 0 0

35mm cameras take 35mm film, so really no special qualities at all

2006-06-30 07:56:34 · answer #4 · answered by scruffy 5 · 0 0

It uses film and have the same qualities as every other camera out there. Unless it is a high quality film camera.

2006-06-30 12:21:09 · answer #5 · answered by RedCloud_1998 6 · 0 0

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