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===Early history=== {{See also|Film stock|Kinetoscope}} [[File:Eastman giving Edison the first roll of movie film 01.png|thumb|Eastman (L) giving Edison the first roll of movie film, which was 35 mm]] In 1880, [[George Eastman]] began to manufacture [[gelatin]] dry photographic plates in [[Rochester, New York]]. Along with W. H. Walker, Eastman invented a holder for a roll of picture-carrying gelatin layer-coated paper. [[Hannibal Goodwin]] then invented a [[nitrocellulose]] [[film base]] in 1887, the first transparent, flexible film.<ref>{{cite magazine | url = https://www.wired.com/2011/05/0502celuloid-photographic-film/| date = 2 May 2011 | access-date = 29 August 2017 | first = Randy | last = Alfred | magazine = [[Wired (magazine)|Wired]] | title = May 2, 1887: Celluloid-Film Patent Ignites Long Legal Battle}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/eastman/timeline/index_2.html |title=The Wizard of Photography: The Story of George Eastman and How He Transformed Photography |work=Timeline PBS American Experience Online |access-date=July 5, 2006}}</ref> Eastman also produced these components, and his was the first major company to mass-produce such film when, in 1889, Eastman realized that the dry-gelatino-bromide [[emulsion]] could be coated onto this clear base, eliminating the paper.<ref>{{cite book |last=Mees |first=C. E. Kenneth |year=1961 |title=From Dry Plates to Ektachrome Film: A Story of Photographic Research |publisher=Ziff-Davis Publishing |pages=15–16}}</ref> With the advent of flexible film, [[Thomas Edison]] quickly set out on his invention, the [[Kinetoscope]], which was first shown at the [[Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences]] on May 9, 1893.<ref>{{cite book|last=Robinson|first=David|url=https://archive.org/details/frompeepshowtopa0000robi|title=From peep show to palace: the birth of American film|publisher=Columbia University Press|year=1996|isbn=978-0-231-10338-1|page=[https://archive.org/details/frompeepshowtopa0000robi/page/39 39]|url-access=registration}}</ref> The Kinetoscope was a film loop system intended for one-person viewing.<ref name="hone">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Z_4VAAAACAAJ|title=Eastman Professional Motion Picture Films|date=June 1, 1983|author=Eastman Kodak Co.|publisher=Sterling|isbn=978-0-87985-477-5}}</ref> Edison, along with assistant [[William Kennedy Dickson]], followed that up with the [[Kinetoscope#Kinetophone|Kinetophone]], which combined the Kinetoscope with Edison's cylinder [[phonograph]]. Beginning in March 1892, Eastman and then, from April 1893 into 1896, New York's Blair Camera Co. supplied Edison with film stock.<ref name="JSMPE Dec 1933">{{cite journal|last=Dickson|first=W. K. L.|date=December 1933|title= A Brief History of the Kinetograph, the Kinetoscope and the Kineto-Phonograph |url=https://archive.org/stream/journalofsociety21socirich#page/434/mode/2up|journal= Journal of the Society of Motion Picture Engineers|volume=21|issue=6|pages=435–455|doi=10.5594/J12965|access-date=March 13, 2012}}</ref><ref name="John Fullerton 3">{{cite book|last1=Fullerton|first1=John|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9lMAfjLi1LEC|title=Moving images: from Edison to the Webcam|last2=Söderbergh-Widding|first2=Astrid|date=June 2000|publisher=John Libbey & Co Ltd|isbn=978-1-86462-054-2|page=3}}</ref> Dickson is credited as the inventor of 35 mm movie film in 1889,<ref name="Belton" /><sup>652</sup> when the Edison company was using Eastman film.<ref name="Belton" /><sup>653–654</sup>{{refn|group=fn|name=dicksonsmpte|The actual dimension of 35 mm specified by the [[Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers|SMPTE]] is {{convert|1.377|+/-|0.001|in}}. The size initially created by Dickson was only 0.075 mm narrower than the 35 mm standard that has existed since 1930. An account of this is given in an article by Dickson in the December 1933 SMPTE journal. This size was also exactly half the width of the {{convert|2+3/4|in|mm|adj=mid|wide}} "A-type" 120 and 620 rollfilm which was the standard Eastman size at the time. The standard size was increased at the May 1929 meeting of the SMPE and published in 1930.<ref>{{cite web |first=Joe |last=McGloin |url=http://www.subclub.org/shop/halframe.htm |title=Half Frame Cameras |website=The Sub Club |access-date=August 12, 2006}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.eastman.org/fm/mees/htmlsrc/mE12900002_ful.html |title=Enhancing the Illusion: The Process and Origins of Photography |website=George Eastman House |access-date=August 12, 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080117183418/http://www.eastman.org/fm/mees/htmlsrc/mE12900002_ful.html |archive-date=17 January 2008}}</ref>}} The company still received film from Blair after this; at first Blair would supply only {{convert|40|mm|frac=16|abbr=on|adj=on}} film stock that would be trimmed and perforated at the Edison lab to create {{convert|1+3/8|in|adj=on}} gauge filmstrips, then at some point in 1894 or 1895, Blair began sending stock to Edison that was cut exactly to specification.<ref name="JSMPE Dec 1933" /><ref name="John Fullerton 3" /> Edison's [[aperture]] defined a single frame of film at four [[Film perforations|perforations]] high.<ref name="katz">{{cite book|last=Katz|first=Ephraim|url=https://archive.org/details/filmencyclopedia0katz|title=The Film Encyclopedia|publisher=HarperCollins|year=1994|isbn=978-0-06-273089-3|url-access=registration}}</ref> <!---redirect to section for this name---> Around 1896, a 35mm projector known as a "photo-rotoscope" was made by W. C. Hughes in [[London]], which advanced the film by means of a "dog" motion.<ref>{{cite web | title='Photo-rotoscope' 35mm projector mechanism | website=Science Museum Group Collection| url=https://collection.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/objects/co18670/photo-rotoscope-35mm-projector-mechanism-35-mm-cine-film-projector | access-date=24 December 2022}}</ref> For a time, it had been generally assumed that Dickson was following cinematography formats established by Eastman in producing the film, but Eastman had produced film in sheets that were then cut to order.<ref name="Belton" /><sup>652–653</sup> Dickson used the film supplied for [[Eastman Kodak]] cameras in 1889, a transparent [[70 mm film|70 mm]] celluloid film, in his development of a more suitable [[film stock]], and "simply slit this film in half";<ref name="Belton" /><sup>653–654</sup> it was initially developed for the Kinetoscope, a one-person viewer, not to be projected.<ref name="Belton" /><sup>658</sup> The image was still of high quality, even when magnified, and was more economical than 70 mm film (and more economical than any other gauge, as cutting the 70 mm to size would have created waste).<ref name="Belton" /><sup>654</sup> 35 mm was immediately accepted as standard by the [[Auguste and Louis Lumière|Lumière brothers]], and became the main film used in the UK because it was the stock sold to these filmmakers by the Blair company.<ref name=Belton>{{cite journal|url=https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7228070|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180605024653/https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7228070/|url-status=dead|archive-date=June 5, 2018|title=The Origins of 35mm Film as a Standard|last=Belton|first=John|journal= Journal of the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers|volume=99|issue=8|date=August 1990|pages=652–661|doi=10.5594/J02613|issn=0036-1682}}</ref><sup>653</sup> Edison claimed exclusive [[patent]] rights to the design of 35 mm motion picture film,{{refn|group=fn|{{US patent|0589168}}}} with four sprocket holes (perforations) per frame, forcing his only major filmmaking competitor, [[American Mutoscope & Biograph]], to use a 68 mm film that used friction feed, not sprocket holes, to move the film through the camera. A court judgment in March 1902 invalidated Edison's claim, allowing any producer or distributor to use the Edison 35 mm film design without license. Filmmakers were already doing so in Britain and Europe, where Edison did not file patents.<ref>{{cite book |last=Musser |first=Charles |title=The Emergence of Cinema: The American Screen to 1907 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=IEUMWToGOtUC |year=1994 |publisher=University of California Press |location=Berkeley, California |isbn=978-0-520-08533-6 |pages=303–313}}</ref> At the time, film stock was usually supplied unperforated and punched by the filmmaker to their standards with perforation equipment. A variation developed by the Lumière brothers used a single circular perforation on each side of the frame towards the middle of the horizontal axis.<ref name="lumiere">Lobban, Grant. "Film Gauges and Soundtracks", [[British Kinematograph, Sound and Television Society|BKSTS]] wall chart (sample frame provided). [Year unknown]</ref> ==== Becoming the standard ==== [[File:Dickson's 35 mm movie film standard and 35 mm patent design.png|thumb|Dickson's 35 mm movie film standard (center)]] When films began to be projected, several projection devices were unsuccessful and fell into obscurity because of technical failure, lack of business acumen on the part of their promoters, or both. The [[Vitascope]], the first projection device to use 35 mm, was technologically superior and compatible with the many motion pictures produced on 35 mm film. Edison bought the device in 1895–96; the Lumiere's 35 mm projection [[Cinematograph]] also premiered in 1895, and they established 35 mm as the standard for exhibition.<ref name="Belton" /><sup>658</sup> Standardization in recording came from monopolization of the business by Eastman and Edison, and because of Edison's typical business model involving the patent system: Eastman and Edison managed their film patents well<ref name="Belton" /><sup>656</sup> – Edison filed the 35 mm patent in 1896, the year after Dickson left his employ<ref name="Belton" /><sup>657</sup> – and so controlled the use and development of film.<ref name="Belton" /><sup>656</sup> Dickson left the Edison company in 1895, going on to help competitors produce cameras and other film gauges that would not infringe on [[List of Edison patents|Edison's patents]]. However, by 1900, filmmakers found it too expensive to develop and use other gauges, and went back to using the cheap and widely-available 35 mm.<ref name="Belton" /><sup>657</sup> Dickson said in 1933: {{quote|At the end of the year 1889, I increased the width of the picture from {{frac||1|2}} inch to {{frac||3|4}} inch, then, to 1 inch by {{frac||3|4}} inch high. The actual width of the film was {{frac|1|3|8}} inches to allow for the perforations now punched on both edges, 4 holes to the phase or picture, which perforations were a shade smaller than those now in use. This standardized film size of 1889 has remained, with only minor variations, unaltered to date.<ref name="Belton" /><sup>652</sup>}} Until 1953, the 35 mm film was seen as "basic technology" in the film industry, rather than optional, despite other gauges being available.<ref name="Belton" /><sup>652</sup> [[File:35mm film format with optical soundtrack.svg|thumb|upright=1.5|35 mm film diagram]] In 1908, Edison formed "a cartel of production companies", a [[trust (19th century)|trust]] called the [[Motion Picture Patents Company]] (MPPC), pooling patents for collective use in the industry and positioning Edison's own technology as the standard to be licensed out.<ref name="Belton" /><sup>656</sup> 35 mm became the "official" standard of the newly formed MPPC, which agreed in 1909 to what would become the standard: 35 mm gauge, with Edison perforations and a 1.3{{overline|3}}:1 (4:3) [[aspect ratio (image)|aspect ratio]] (also developed by Dickson).<ref name="Belton" /><sup>652</sup><ref group="fn">The gauge and perforations are almost identical to modern film stock; the full silent ratio is also used as the [[film gate]] in movie cameras, although portions of the image are later cropped out in post-production and projection.</ref> Scholar Paul C. Spehr describes the importance of these developments: {{quote|The early acceptance of 35 mm as a standard had momentous impact on the development and spread of cinema. The standard gauge made it possible for films to be shown in every country of the world ... It provided a uniform, reliable and predictable format for production, distribution and exhibition of movies, facilitating the rapid spread and acceptance of the movies as a world-wide device for entertainment and communication.<ref name="John Fullerton 3"/>}} When the MPPC adopted the 35 mm format, [[Bell & Howell]] produced cameras, projectors, and perforators for the medium of an "exceptionally high quality", further cementing it as the standard.<ref name="Belton" /><sup>659</sup> Edison and Eastman's form of business manipulation was ruled unlawful in 1914, but by this time the technology had become the established standard.<ref name="Belton" /><sup>657</sup> In 1917, the new [[Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers|Society of Motion Picture Engineers]] (SMPE) "acknowledged the de facto status of 35mm as the industry's dominant film gauge, adopting it as an engineering standard".<ref name="Belton" /><sup>659</sup>
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