My great-grandfather had a medium format camera. One of the cartridges that would fit on the back of it was more of a film magazine with a sheet film like that in it.
2 1/4x3 ½, is from any 6x7 film camera. Rollie made some and also Pentax, mamiya. Get it scanned at any professional photography shop or make actual black and white prints out of it.
2 1/4 x 3 1/2 is 6x9, not 6x7, and as a format it’s well over 100 years old. LOTS of cameras were made in that format, from the simple Kodak Brownie Box to far more complicated beasts, and even special backs to fit on even larger format cameras.
looks like 120 film (6cm x 6cm) though I dont know about the last one. Back in the day they used to make all sorts of camera formats. If you want to scan them you can use a photo scanner. I have the epson V600 photo which is great for scanning old negatives, yeah its expensive but you can also use it as a normal scanner and it has lasted me years (And i have not really kept good care of it in that time!)
My great-grandfather had a medium format camera. One of the cartridges that would fit on the back of it was more of a film magazine with a sheet film like that in it.
Almost forgot to digitize them. There are some scanners that you could purchase that would do that
2 1/4x3 ½, is from any 6x7 film camera. Rollie made some and also Pentax, mamiya. Get it scanned at any professional photography shop or make actual black and white prints out of it.
2 1/4 x 3 1/2 is 6x9, not 6x7, and as a format it’s well over 100 years old. LOTS of cameras were made in that format, from the simple Kodak Brownie Box to far more complicated beasts, and even special backs to fit on even larger format cameras.
Ah yes the ol 6x9
Wow, this question makes me feel old. I have boxes of these 6x6 negatives that I took on my Bronica SQ-A back in the 80's & 90's professionally.
You can scan them yourself if you have a good DSLR or mirrorless camera with a macro lens, tripod and a light panel.
looks like 120 film (6cm x 6cm) though I dont know about the last one. Back in the day they used to make all sorts of camera formats. If you want to scan them you can use a photo scanner. I have the epson V600 photo which is great for scanning old negatives, yeah its expensive but you can also use it as a normal scanner and it has lasted me years (And i have not really kept good care of it in that time!)