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Aspect ratios: Difference between revisions

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1,265 bytes removed ,  19 September 2016
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* 28mm - 1.36:1
* 28mm - 1.36:1


==16mm==
==Related Pages==
 
*[[16mm]] See: ''16mm aspect ratios''
The [[16mm]] frame has a native full-frame aspect ratio of ~1.34:1. This is the aspect ratio of the vast majority of 16mm prints.
*[[70mm]] See: ''70mm aspect ratios''
 
 
Other 16mm aspect ratios exist, however. Some prints are hard-matted to widescreen aspect ratios like 1.85 and 1.66 (this is seen with some frequency on 16mm reductions of widescreen feature films originally released on 35mm).
 
 
Anamorphic 16mm prints also exist. These have an aspect ratio of 2.66:1 (because of the native 1.33 aspect ratio of the frame). Note that this means that anamorphic 16mm reductions of films originally released as 35mm anamorphic will be cropped slightly at the top and bottom of the frame!
 
 
16mm was historically used for the distribution of Hollywood releases to nontheatrical venues (schools, prisons, summer camps, etc.) as well as for television broadcast. Further variations related to aspect ratio crop up on prints that were used for these purposes. These include simple cropping of widescreen or CinemaScope images to 16mm's native 1.33 as well as "[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pan_and_scan pan and scan]" efforts.
 
 
<gallery widths=300px heights=300px>
16mm-doubleperf-silent.jpg|''Conventional full frame 16mm print without soundtrack''
File:16mm-mono-single.jpg|''Conventional full frame 16mm print with soundtrack''
File:16mm-scope2.jpg|''Anamorphic 16mm print''
</gallery>


==35mm==
==35mm==

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