Disc Film

Disc film was another consumer-level film designed for ease of use. Each round disc included 15 tiny rectangular frames around a plastic hub. Disc film was only produced in color, never in black and white, and never in slide format. The small frame size usually resulted in grainy and low quality images, which might explain why this format was never very popular.
Disc cameras went out of production in 1990, but Kodak waited until 1999 to discontinue the film. Most disc film was manufactured by Kodak, but you might also see samples from Konica, Fuji, and 3M.
- Dates: 1982 – 1999
- Dimensions: 68mm diameter disc, 15 10mm × 8.5mm frames
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