Yes, but Kodak still offer a range of high quality professional transparency film but it uses a different chemical process.
called kodachrome .kodak called kodachrome .kodak
Because the film is 35mm wide.
additive colour and colour reversal
If the name has any term like 35mm or anything of the like, it is a film camera, using 35mm roll film.
A 35mm slide scanner is good for converting 35mm film into DVDs.
You can not convert a RollieCord TRL camera to use 35mm film instead of 120 film. This camera was designed to only work with 120mm film while shooting. However, there are models of RollieCord TRLs that do only take 35mm film too.
Kodachrome was one of Kodak's signature lines of color film, noted for reproducing lifelike color. (It was also immortalized in a Paul Simon song, in the early 1970s.) It was available in both still and movie versions. Kodachrome color movie film is just what the name says; color film for home movies. Kodak largely discontinued home movie equipment in the 1980s, when home video became popular, but continued to make movie film for years afterwards. (It got scarcer and pricier as time went on and demand continued to fall.) Kodak announced this year that it will discontinue Kodachrome film; digital photography has largely taken over the market. But we're still humming that Paul Simon song.
35mm
color reversal film :D
Maximum of 36 shots for a 35mm film.
Kodachrome was created in 1935.
ECN II film is motion picture film.