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Aspect ratio (image)

Common image aspect ratios
.461538:1 (6:13)
Commonly used in modern smartphones
.5625:1 (9:16)
Commonly used in mid-late 2010s smartphones
.6:1 (3:5)
Commonly used in early 2010s smartphones
.6:1 (2:3)
Commonly used in late 2000s smartphones
1:1
Square. Aspect ratio of 6×6 medium format still cameras. Used in some social networks.
1.1875:1 (19:16)
Fox Movietone aspect ratio
1.25:1 (5:4)
Early televisions, also large (4×5 and 8×10) and medium format (so-called 6×7) still photography
1.3:1 (4:3)
Traditional television & computer monitor standard, also classic 35 mm film standard
1.375:1 (11:8)
Academy standard film aspect ratio
1.43:1 (143:100)
IMAX motion picture film format
1.5:1 (3:2)
Classic 35 mm still photographic film
1.5:1 (14:9)
Used to create an acceptable picture on both 4:3 and 16:9 televisions
1.6:1 (8:5)
A common computer screen ratio
1.6180:1 (:1)
The golden ratio
1.6:1 (5:3)
A common European widescreen standard; Paramount format;[1] native Super 16 mm film
1.7:1 (16:9)
HD video standard; American & British digital broadcast TV standard
1.8962:1 (256:135)
DCI standard for 4K & 2K; Digital IMAX
2.2:1 (11:5)
Standard 70 mm film Super Panavision
2.35:1, 2.39:1, or 2.4:1 (47:20, 239:100, or 12:5)
A current widescreen cinema standard
2.414:1 (δS:1)
The silver ratio
2.76:1 (69:25)
Ultra Panavision 70
3.5:1 or 3.6:1 (32:9 or 18:5)
Super Ultrawide, Ultra-WideScreen 3.6
4:1
Polyvision, consisting of three side-by-side frames of 4:3. Used only in Napoléon (1927)

The aspect ratio of an image is the ratio of its width to its height, and is expressed with two numbers separated by a colon, such as 16:9, sixteen-to-nine. For the x:y aspect ratio, the image is x units wide and y units high. Common aspect ratios are 1.85:1 and 2.39:1 in cinematography, 4:3 and 16:9 in television photography, and 3:2 in still photography.

Some common examples edit

The common film aspect ratios used in cinemas are 1.85:1 and 2.4:1.[2] Two common videographic aspect ratios are 4:3 (1.3:1),[a] the universal video format of the 20th century, and 16:9 (1.7:1), universal for high-definition television and European digital television. Other cinematic and video aspect ratios exist, but are used infrequently.

In still camera photography, the most common aspect ratios are 4:3, 3:2 (1.5:1), and more recently found in consumer cameras, 16:9.[3] Other aspect ratios, such as 5:3, 5:4, and 1:1 (square format), are used in photography as well, particularly in medium format and large format.

With television, DVD and Blu-ray Disc, converting formats of unequal ratios is achieved by enlarging the original image to fill the receiving format's display area and cutting off any excess picture information (zooming and cropping), by adding horizontal mattes (letterboxing) or vertical mattes (pillarboxing) to retain the original format's aspect ratio, by stretching (hence distorting) the image to fill the receiving format's ratio, or by scaling by different factors in both directions, possibly scaling by a different factor in the center and at the edges (as in Wide Zoom mode).

Practical limitations edit

In motion picture formats, the physical size of the film area between the sprocket perforations determines the image's size. The universal standard (established by William Dickson and Thomas Edison in 1892) is a frame that is four perforations high. The film itself is 35 mm wide (1.38 in), but the area between the perforations is 24.89 mm × 18.67 mm (0.980 in × 0.735 in), leaving the de facto ratio of 4:3, or 1.3:1.[4]

With a space designated for the standard optical soundtrack, and the frame size reduced to maintain an image that is wider than tall; this resulted in the Academy aperture of 22 mm × 16 mm (0.866 in × 0.630 in) or 1.375:1 aspect ratio.

Cinema terminology edit

The motion picture industry convention assigns a value of 1.0 to the image's height; an anamorphic frame (since 1970, approximately 2.4:1) is often incorrectly described (rounded) as 2.40:1 or 2.40 ("two-four-oh"). After 1952, a number of aspect ratios were experimented with for anamorphic productions, including 2.66:1 and 2.55:1.[5] A SMPTE specification for anamorphic projection from 1957 (PH22.106-1957) finally standardized the aperture to 2.35:1.[5] An update in 1970 (PH22.106-1971) changed the aspect ratio to 2.39:1 in order to make splices less noticeable.[5] This aspect ratio of 2.39:1 was confirmed by the most recent revision from August 1993 (SMPTE 195–1993).[5]

In American cinemas, the common projection ratios are 1.85:1 and 2.39:1. Some European countries have 1.6:1 as the wide screen standard. The "Academy ratio" of 1.375:1 was used for all cinema films in the sound era until 1953 (with the release of George Stevens' Shane in 1.6:1). During that time, television, which had a similar aspect ratio of 1.3:1, became a perceived threat to movie studios. Hollywood responded by creating a large number of wide-screen formats: CinemaScope (up to 2.6:1), Todd-AO (2.20:1), and VistaVision (initially 1.50:1, now 1.6:1 to 2.00:1) to name just a few. The "flat" 1.85:1 aspect ratio was introduced in May 1953, and became one of the most common cinema projection standards in the United States and elsewhere.

The goal of these various lenses and aspect ratios was to capture as much of the frame as possible, onto as large an area of the film as possible, in order to fully utilize the film being used. Some of the aspect ratios were chosen to utilize smaller film sizes in order to save film costs while other aspect ratios were chosen to use larger film sizes in order to produce a wider higher resolution image. In either case the image was squeezed horizontally to fit the film's frame size and avoid any unused film area.[6]

Movie camera systems edit

The development of various film camera systems must ultimately cater to the placement of the frame in relation to the lateral constraints of the perforations and the optical soundtrack area. One clever wide screen alternative, VistaVision, used standard 35 mm film running sideways through the camera gate, so that the sprocket holes were above and below frame, allowing a larger horizontal negative size per frame as only the vertical size was now restricted by the perforations. There were even a limited number of projectors constructed to also run the print-film horizontally. Generally, however, the 1.50:1 ratio of the initial VistaVision image was optically converted to a vertical print (on standard four-perforation 35 mm movie film) to show with the standard projectors available at theaters, and was then masked in the projector to the United States standard of 1.85:1. The format was briefly revived by Lucasfilm in the late 1970s for special effects work that required a larger negative size (due to image degradation from the optical printing steps necessary to make multi-layer composites). It went into obsolescence largely due to better cameras, lenses, and film stocks available for standard four-perforation formats, in addition to increased lab costs for making prints in comparison to more standard vertical processes. (The horizontal process was also adapted to 70 mm film by IMAX, which was first shown at the Osaka '70 Worlds Fair.)

Super 16 mm film was frequently used for television production due to its lower cost, lack of need for soundtrack space on the film itself (as it is not projected but rather transferred to video), and aspect ratio similar to 16:9 (the native ratio of Super 16 mm is 15:9). It also can be blown up to 35 mm for theatrical release and therefore is sometimes used for feature films.

Current video standards edit

1:1 (Square) edit

Square displays are rarely used in devices[7][8] and monitors.[9] Nonetheless, video consumption on social apps has grown rapidly and led to the emergence of new video formats more suited to mobile devices that can be held in horizontal and vertical orientations. In that sense, square video was popularized by mobile apps such as Instagram and Vine and has since been supported by other major social platforms including Facebook and Twitter. It can fill nearly twice as much screen space compared to 16:9 format (when the device is held differently while viewing from how video was recorded).

4:3 standard edit

4:3 (1.33:1) (generally read as Four-Three, Four-by-Three, or Four-to-Three) for standard television for fullscreen aspect ratio 1.33:1 has been in use since the invention of moving picture cameras, and many computer monitors used to employ the same aspect ratio. 4:3 was the aspect ratio used for 35 mm films in the silent era. It is also very close to the 1.375:1 Academy ratio, defined by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences as a standard after the advent of optical sound-on-film. By having TV match this aspect ratio, movies originally photographed on 35 mm film could be satisfactorily viewed on TV in the early days of the medium (i.e. the 1940s and the 1950s).

With the adoption of high-definition television, the majority of modern televisions are now produced with 16:9 displays instead. Apple's iPad series of tablets continue to use 4:3 displays (despite other Apple products typically using widescreen aspect ratios) to better suit use as an e-reader; however, the 2018 iPad Pro 11-inch uses a 1.43:1 aspect ratio.[10]

14:9 standard edit

14:9 (generally named as Fourteen-by-Nine, Fourteen-Nine, and Fourteen-to-Nine) is the aspect ratio mainly used when the 4:3 programs are cropped.[11][12]

16:10 standard edit

16:10 (8:5) is an aspect ratio mostly used for computer displays and tablet computers. The width of the display is 1.6 times its height. This ratio is close to the golden ratio " " which is approximately 1.618. LCD computer displays using the 16:10 ratio started to appear in the mass market from 2003. By 2008, 16:10 had become the most common aspect ratio for LCD monitors and laptop displays.[13] Since 2010, however, 16:9 has become the mainstream standard, driven by the 1080p standard for high definition television and lower manufacturing costs.[14][15]

In 2005–2008, 16:10 (1.6:1) overtook 4:3 as the most sold aspect ratio for LCD monitors. At the time, 16:10 also had 90% of the notebook market and was the most commonly used aspect ratio for laptops.[14] However, 16:10 had a short reign as the most common aspect ratio. Around 2008–2010, there was a rapid shift by computer display manufacturers to the 16:9 aspect ratio and by 2011 16:10 had almost disappeared from new mass market products. According to Net Applications, by October 2012 the market share of 16:10 displays had dropped to less than 23 percent.[16]

Notably, Apple used 16:10 for all of its MacBook models until 2021, when the 5th-generation MacBook Pro switched to a taller aspect ratio of approximately 1.54:1.[17] The MacBook Air continues to use 16:10 as of 2022.[18]

1.66:1, 1.75:1 & 16:9 standard widescreen edit

16:9 (1.77:1) (generally named as Sixteen-by-Nine, Sixteen-Nine, and Sixteen-to-Nine) is the international standard format of HDTV, non-HD digital television and analog widescreen television PALplus. Japan's Hi-Vision originally started with a 5:3 (= 15:9) ratio but converted when the international standards group introduced a wider ratio of 5+13 to 3 (= 16:9). Many digital video cameras have the capability to record in 16:9 (= 42:32), and 16:9 is the only widescreen aspect ratio natively supported by the DVD standard. DVD producers can also choose to show even wider ratios such as 1.66:1, 1.75:1, 1.77:1 and 1.78:1[2] within the 16:9 DVD frame by hard matting or adding black bars within the image itself. The 16:9 aspect ratio was used often in British TVs in the United Kingdom in the 1990s, and is also used in some smartphones, laptops, and desktops.

1.85:1 edit

Equivalent to integer ratio of 37:20. When cinema attendance dropped, Hollywood created widescreen aspect ratios in order to differentiate the film industry from TV, with one of the most common being the 1.85:1 ratio.[19][20]

2:1 standard edit

The 2:1 aspect ratio was first used in the 1950s for the RKO Superscope format.[21][22]

Since 1998, cinematographer Vittorio Storaro has advocated for a format named "Univisium" that uses a 2:1 format.[23] It is designed to be a compromise between the cinema 2.39:1 aspect ratio and the HD-TV broadcast 16:9 ratio. Univisium has gained little traction in the theatrical film market, but has recently been used by Netflix and Amazon Video for productions such as House of Cards and Transparent, respectively. This aspect ratio is similar to the 1.9:1 standard acquisition formats mandated by these content platforms and is not necessarily a creative choice.[24]

Moreover, some mobile devices, such as the LG G6, LG V30, Huawei Mate 10 Pro, Google Pixel 2 XL, OnePlus 5T and Sony Xperia XZ3, are embracing the 2:1 format (advertised as 18:9), as well as the Samsung Galaxy S8, Samsung Galaxy Note 8, Samsung Galaxy S9 and Samsung Galaxy Note 9 with a slightly similar 18.5:9 format.[25][26] The Apple iPhone X also has a similar screen ratio of 19.5:9 (2.16:1).

2:1, 2.2:1, 2.35:1, 2.39:1, 2.4:1, 2.55:1, 2.76:1 and 21:9 standard widescreen edit

Anamorphic format is the cinematography technique of shooting a widescreen picture on standard 35 mm film or other visual recording media with a non-widescreen native aspect ratio. When projected, images have an approximate 2:1, 2.2:1, 2.35:1, 2.39:1, 2.4:1, 2.55:1 and 2.76:1 (all of which are often rounded to 21:9) aspect ratio. "21:9 aspect ratio" is actually 64:27 (= 43:33), or approximately 2.37:1, and is near both cinematic movie aspect ratios. Most Indian Bollywood films were shot in the 1.37:1 ratio until 1972, when 2.39:1 became standard for all Bollywood movies.

Obtaining height, width, and area of the screen edit

Often, screen specifications are given by their diagonal length. The following formulae can be used to find the height (h), width (w) and area (A), where r stands for ratio, written as a fraction of x by y, and d for diagonal length.

 
 
 
 

Distinctions edit

This article primarily addresses the aspect ratio of images as displayed, which is more formally referred to as the display aspect ratio (DAR). In digital images, there is a distinction with the storage aspect ratio (SAR), which is the ratio of numbers of pixels. If an image is displayed with square pixels, then these ratios agree. If, instead, non-square ("rectangular") pixels are used, then these ratios differ. The aspect ratio of the pixels themselves is known as the pixel aspect ratio (PAR) – for square pixels this is 1:1 – and these are related by the identity:

SAR × PAR = DAR

Rearranging (solving for PAR) yields:

PAR = DAR/SAR

For example:

  • A 640 × 480 VGA image has
    • a SAR of 640/480 = 4:3
    • and if displayed on a 4:3 display (DAR = 4:3), has square pixels, hence a PAR of 1:1.
  • By contrast, a 720 × 576 D-1 PAL image has
    • a SAR of 720/576 = 5:4
    • but is displayed on a 4:3 display (DAR = 4:3), so by this formula it would have a PAR of (4:3)/(5:4) = 16:15.

However, because standard definition digital video was originally based on digitally sampling analog television, the 720 horizontal pixels actually capture a slightly wider image to avoid loss of the original analog picture. In actual images, these extra pixels are often partly or entirely black, as only the center 704 horizontal pixels carry actual 4:3 or 16:9 image. Hence, the actual pixel aspect ratio PAR for PAL video is a little different from that given by the formula, specifically 12:11 for PAL and 10:11 for NTSC. For consistency, the same effective pixel aspect ratios are used even for standard definition digital video originated in digital form rather than converted from analog. For more details refer to the main article.

In analog images such as film there is no notion of pixel, nor notion of SAR or PAR, and "aspect ratio" refers unambiguously to DAR. Actual displays do not generally have non-square pixels, though digital sensors might; they are rather a mathematical abstraction used in resampling images to convert between resolutions.

Non-square pixels arise often in early digital TV standards, related to digitalization of analog TV signals – whose horizontal and vertical resolutions differ and are thus best described by non-square pixels – and also in some digital videocameras and computer display modes, such as Color Graphics Adapter (CGA). Today they arise particularly in transcoding between resolutions with different SARs.

DAR is also known as image aspect ratio and picture aspect ratio, though the latter can be confused with pixel aspect ratio; PAR is also known as sample aspect ratio, though it can also be confused with storage aspect ratio.

Previous and currently used aspect ratios edit

 
Comparison of several film aspect ratios with the heights forced to be equal
1:2.32
The first television aspect ratio, used by John Logie Baird's 30-line mechanical television in the early 1930s.[27]
1.19:1 = 19:16
Sometimes referred to as the Movietone ratio, this ratio was used briefly during the transitional period when the film industry was converting to sound, from 1926 to 1932 approx. It is produced by superimposing an optical soundtrack over a full-gate 1.3 aperture in printing, resulting in an almost square image. Films shot in this ratio are often projected or transferred to video incorrectly using a 1.375:1 mask or squashed to 1.375:1. Examples of films shot in the Movietone ratio include Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans, M, Hallelujah!, and, significantly more recently, The Lighthouse.[28][29] A trend arising from the widespread use of smartphones is vertical video that is intended for viewing in portrait mode. The format was popularized in particular by apps such as Snapchat, Instagram, and YouTube—which all offer means for publishing vertical videos as content and advertising.[30][31][32]
1.25:1 = 5:4
The once-popular aspect for larger format computer monitors, especially in the guise of mass-produced 17" and 19" LCD panels or 19" and 21" CRTs, using 1280×1024 (SXGA) or similar resolutions. Notably one of the few popular display aspect ratios narrower than 4:3, and one popularised by business (CAD, DTP) rather than entertainment use, as it is well-suited to full-page layout editing. Historically, 5:4 was also the original aspect ratio of early 405-line television broadcasts, which progressed to a wider 4:3 as the idea of broadcasting cinema films gained traction.
1.3:1 = 4:3 = 12:9
35 mm original silent film ratio, today commonly known in TV and video as 4:3. Also standard ratio for MPEG-2 video compression. This format is still used in many personal video cameras today and has influenced the selection or design of other aspect ratios. It is the standard Super 35 mm ratio.
1.37:1 = 48:35
16 mm and 35 mm standard ratio.
1.375:1 = 11:8
35 mm full-screen sound film image, nearly universal in films between 1932 and 1953. Officially adopted as the Academy ratio in 1932 by AMPAS. Rarely used in theatrical context nowadays, but occasionally used in other contexts.
1.43:1
IMAX format. IMAX productions use 70 mm wide film (the same as used for 70 mm feature films), but the film runs through the camera and projector horizontally. This allows for a physically larger area for each image.
1.5:1 = 3:2
The aspect ratio of 35 mm film used for still photography when eight perforations are exposed. Also the native aspect ratio of VistaVision, for which the film runs horizontally. Used on the ChromeOS-based Chromebook Pixel notebook PC, the Game Boy Advance portable game console, the Surface Pro 3 laplet, and Surface Studio.
1.5:1 = 14:9
Widescreen aspect ratio sometimes used in shooting commercials etc. as a compromise format between 4:3 and 16:9. When converted to a 16:9 frame, there is slight pillarboxing, while conversion to 4:3 creates slight letterboxing. All widescreen content on ABC Family's SD feed until January 2016 was presented in this ratio.
1.6:1 = 16:10 = 8:5
Widescreen computer monitor ratio (for instance, 1920×1200 resolution).
1.6:1 = 5:3 = 15:9
35 mm widescreen ratio, originally invented by Paramount Pictures, later a standard among several European countries.[which?] It is also the native Super 16 mm frame ratio. Sometimes this ratio is rounded to 1.67:1. From the late 1980s to the early 2000s, Walt Disney Feature Animation's CAPS program animated their features in the 1.6:1 ratio (a compromise between the 1.85:1 theatrical ratio and the 1.3:1 ratio used for home video); this format is also used by the Nintendo 3DS's top screen.
1.75:1 = 7:4
Early 35 mm widescreen ratio, primarily used by MGM and Warner Bros. between 1953 and 1955 and since abandoned, though Disney has cropped some of its post-1950s full-screen films to this ratio for DVD, including The Jungle Book.
1.7:1 = 16:9 = 42:32
Video widescreen standard, used in high-definition television, one of three ratios specified for MPEG-2 video compression. Also used increasingly in personal video cameras. Sometimes this ratio is rounded to 1.78:1.
1.85:1 ~ 37:20
35 mm American and British widescreen standard for theatrical film. Introduced by Universal Pictures in May 1953. Projects approximately three perforations ("perfs") of image space per four-perf frame; films can be shot in 3-perf to save cost of film stock. Also the ratio of Ultra 16 mm. One of two common formats in digital cinema, where it is called "flat".
1.875:1 = 15:8
HDTV ratio used by Silicon Graphics computers in the 1990s, with the resolution being specified as 1920×1024.
1.8962:1 = 256:135
SMPTE/DCI digital cinema basic resolution container aspect ratio, sometimes rounded to 1.896:1[33] or 1.9:1[34][35] (also given as 1.90:1).[36][37] Used by Diao Yinan's The Wild Goose Lake.[37]
2:1 = 18:9
Recently popularized by the Red Digital Cinema. Original SuperScope ratio, also used in Univisium. Used as a flat ratio for some American studios in the 1950s and abandoned in the 1960s. Also used in recent mobile phones such as the LG G6, Google Pixel 2 XL, HTC U11+, Xiaomi MIX 2S, and Huawei Mate 10 Pro, while the Samsung Galaxy S8, Note 8, and S9 use the similar 18.5:9 ratio.
2.165:1 ~ 28:13
Used by the screens of some iPhone models since 2017, including the iPhone X, XS, XS Max, 11, 11 Pro, and 11 Pro Max.
2.208:1 ~ 11:5
70 mm standard. Originally developed for Todd-AO in the 1950s. Specified in MPEG-2 as 2.20:1, but hardly used.
2.35:1 ~ 47:20
35 mm anamorphic prior to 1970, used by CinemaScope ("'Scope") and early Panavision. The anamorphic standard has subtly changed so that contemporary anamorphic productions are actually 2.39:1,[2] but often referred to as 2.35:1 anyway, due to old convention. (Anamorphic refers to the compression of the image on film to maximize an area slightly taller than standard 4-perf Academy aperture, but presents the widest of aspect ratios.) All Indian Bollywood films released after 1972 are shot in this standard for theatrical exhibition.[clarification needed]
2.370:1 = 64:27 = 43:33
TVs were produced with this aspect ratio between 2009 and 2012[38] and marketed as "21:9 cinema displays". But this aspect ratio is still seen on some higher-end monitors, which are sometimes called UltraWide monitors.
2.39:1 ~ 43:18 = 21+12:9
35 mm anamorphic from 1970 onwards. Aspect ratio of current anamorphic widescreen theatrical viewings, commercials, and some music videos. Often commercially branded as Panavision format or "'Scope". One of two common formats in digital cinema, where it is called "scope".
2.4:1 = 12:5
Rounded notation of 2.39:1, also as 2.40:1. Blu-ray Disc film releases may use only 800 instead of 803 or 804 lines of the 1920×1080 resolution, resulting in an even 2.4:1 aspect ratio.
2.55:1 ~ 51:20
Original aspect ratio of CinemaScope before optical sound was added to the film in 1954. This was also the aspect ratio of CinemaScope 55.
2.59:1 ~ 70:27
Cinerama at full height (three specially captured 35 mm images projected side by side into one composite widescreen image).
2.6:1 = 8:3 = 24:9
Full-frame output from Super 16 mm negative when an anamorphic lens system has been used. Effectively, an image that is of the ratio 24:9 is squashed onto the native 15:9 aspect ratio of a Super 16 mm negative. Also used by Kirill Serebrennikov for Leto (2018).
2.76:1 = 69:25
Ultra Panavision 70/MGM Camera 65 (65 mm with 1.25× anamorphic squeeze). Used only on a handful of films between 1957 and 1966 and some in the 2010s, for some sequences of How the West Was Won (1962) with a slight crop when converted to three-strip Cinerama, and films such as It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) and Ben-Hur (1959). More recently, Quentin Tarantino used it for The Hateful Eight (2015); Gareth Edwards used the process for shooting Rogue One (2016), but the image was cropped to 2.39:1 in post.
3.5:1 = 32:9
In 2017, Samsung and Phillips announced "Super UltraWide displays", with aspect ratio of 32:9.
3.6:1 = 18:5
In 2016, IMAX announced the release of films in "Ultra-WideScreen 3.6" format,[39] with an aspect ratio of 36:10.[40] Ultra-WideScreen 3.6 video format didn't spread, as cinemas in an even wider ScreenX 270° format were released.[41]
4:1
Rare use of Polyvision, three 35 mm 1.3:1 images projected side by side. First used in 1927 on Abel Gance's Napoléon.[42]
12:1
Circle-Vision 360° developed by the Walt Disney Company in 1955 for use in Disneyland. Uses nine 4:3 35 mm projectors to show an image that completely surrounds the viewer. Used in subsequent Disney theme parks and other past applications.

Aspect ratio releases edit

Original aspect ratio (OAR) edit

Original Aspect Ratio (OAR) is a home cinema term for the aspect ratio or dimensions in which a film or visual production was produced, as envisioned by the people involved in the creation of the work. As an example, the film Gladiator was released to theaters in the 2.39:1 aspect ratio. It was filmed in Super 35 and, in addition to being presented in cinemas and television in the Original Aspect Ratio of 2.39:1, it was also broadcast without the matte, altering the aspect ratio to the television standard of 1.3:1. Because of the varied ways in which films are shot, IAR (Intended Aspect Ratio) is a more appropriate term, but is rarely used.

Modified aspect ratio (MAR) edit

Modified Aspect Ratio is a home cinema term for the aspect ratio or dimensions in which a film was modified to fit a specific type of screen, as opposed to original aspect ratio. Modified aspect ratios are usually either 1.3:1 (historically), or (with the advent of widescreen television sets) 1.7:1 aspect ratio. 1.3:1 was the modified aspect ratio used historically on 4:3 broadcast television and home videotape formats such as VHS and Beta. A modified aspect ratio transfer is achieved by means of pan and scan or EAR (Expanded Aspect Ratio)/open matte, the latter meaning removing the cinematic matte from a 1.85:1 film to open up the full 1.3:1 frame or from 2.39:1 to 1.9:1 in IMAX. Another name for it is rescaled aspect ratio.

Problems in film and television edit

 
A windowboxed image

Multiple aspect ratios create additional burdens on directors and the public, and confusion among TV broadcasters. It is common for a widescreen film to be presented in an altered format (cropped, letterboxed or expanded beyond the original aspect ratio). It is also not uncommon for windowboxing to occur (when letterbox and pillarbox happen simultaneously). For instance, a 16:9 broadcast could embed a 4:3 commercial within the 16:9 image area. A viewer watching on a standard 4:3 (non-widescreen) television would see a 4:3 image of the commercial with 2 sets of black stripes, vertical and horizontal (windowboxing or the postage stamp effect). A similar scenario may also occur for a widescreen set owner when viewing 16:9 material embedded in a 4:3 frame, and then watching that in 16:9. Active Format Description is a mechanism used in digital broadcasting to avoid this problem. It is also common that a 4:3 image is stretched horizontally to fit a 16:9 screen to avoid pillarboxing but distorts the image so subjects appear short and fat.

Both PAL and NTSC have provision for some data pulses contained within the video signal used to signal the aspect ratio (See ITU-R BT.1119-1 – Widescreen signaling for broadcasting). These pulses are detected by television sets that have widescreen displays and cause the television to automatically switch to 16:9 display mode. When 4:3 material is included (such as the aforementioned commercial), the television switches to a 4:3 display mode to correctly display the material. Where a video signal is transmitted via a European SCART connection, one of the status lines is used to signal 16:9 material as well.

Still photography edit

Common aspect ratios in still photography include:

  • 1:1 (1.0:1)
  • 5:4 (1.25:1)
  • 4:3 (1.3:1)
  • 3:2 (1.5:1)
  • 5:3 (1.6:1)
  • 16:9 (1.7:1)
  • 3:1 (3.0:1)

Many digital still cameras offer user options for selecting multiple image aspect ratios. Some achieve this through the use of multi-aspect sensors (notably Panasonic), while others simply crop their native image format to have the output match the desired image aspect ratio.

1:1 edit

1:1 is the classic Kodak image, and is available as a choice in some digital still cameras, and hearkens back to the days of film cameras when the square image was popular with photographers using twin lens reflex cameras. These medium format cameras used 120 film rolled onto spools. The 6 × 6 cm image size was the classic 1:1 format in the recent past. 120 film can still be found and used today. Many Polaroid instant films were designed as square formats. Furthermore, up until August 2015, photo-sharing site Instagram only allowed users to upload images in 1:1 format. In 2017, Fujifilm added the 1:1 Instax Square format to their lineup of instant film cameras.

5:4 edit

Common in large and medium format photography ('6x7' cameras, actual size 56mm x 70mm), which fits the common print paper size of 8"×10" without cropping and is still in common use for prints from digital cameras.

4:3 edit

4:3 is used by most digital point-and-shoot cameras, Four Thirds system, Micro Four Thirds system cameras and medium format 645 cameras. The 4:3 digital format popularity was developed to match the then prevailing digital displays of the time, 4:3 computer monitors.

The next several formats have their roots in classic film photography image sizes, both the classic 35 mm film camera, and the multiple format Advanced Photo System (APS) film camera. The APS camera was capable of selecting any of three image formats, APS-H ("High Definition" mode), APS-C ("Classic" mode) and APS-P ("Panoramic" mode).

3:2 edit

3:2 is used by classic 35 mm film cameras using a 36 mm × 24 mm image size, and their digital derivatives represented by DSLRs. Typical DSLRs come in two flavors, the so-called professional "full frame" (36 mm × 24 mm) sensors and variations of smaller, so called "APS-C" sensors. The term "APS" is derived from another film format known as APS and the "-C" refers to "Classic" mode, which exposed images over a smaller area (25.1 mm × 16.7 mm) but retaining the same "classic" 3:2 proportions as full frame 35 mm film cameras.

When discussing DSLRs and their non-SLR derivatives, the term APS-C has become an almost generic term. The two major camera manufacturers Canon and Nikon each developed and established sensor standards for their own versions of APS-C sized and proportioned sensors. Canon actually developed two standards, APS-C and a slightly larger area APS-H (not to be confused with the APS-H film format), while Nikon developed its own APS-C standard, which it calls DX. Regardless of the different flavors of sensors, and their varying sizes, they are close enough to the original APS-C image size, and maintain the classic 3:2 image proportions that these sensors are generally known as an "APS-C" sized sensor.

The reason for DSLR's image sensors being the flatter 3:2 versus the taller point-and-shoot 4:3 is that DSLRs were designed to match the legacy 35 mm SLR film, whereas the majority of digital cameras were designed to match the predominant computer displays of the time, with VGA, SVGA, XGA and UXGA all being 4:3. Widescreen computer monitors did not become popular until the advent of HDTV, which uses a 16:9 image aspect ratio.

16:9 edit

Known as APS-H (30.2 mm × 16.7 mm), with the "-H" denoting "High Definition", the 16:9 format is also the standard image aspect ratio for HDTV. 16:9 is gaining popularity as a format in all classes of consumer still cameras which also shoot High Definition (HD) video. When still cameras have an HD video capability, some can also record stills in the 16:9 format, ideal for display on HD televisions and widescreen computer displays.

3:1 edit

3:1 is yet another format that can find its roots in the APS film camera. Known as APS-P (30.2 × 9.5 mm), with the -P" denoting "Panorama", the 3:1 format was used for panorama photography. The APS-P panorama standard is the least adhered to any APS standard, and panoramic implementation varies with by manufacturer on different cameras, with the only commonality being that the image is much longer than it is tall, in the classic "panorama" style.

Common print sizes in the United States (in inches) include 4×6 (1.5), 5×7 (1.4), 4×5 and 8×10 (1.25), and 11×14 (1.27); large format cameras typically use one of these aspect ratios. Medium-format cameras typically have format designated by nominal sizes in centimeters (6×6, 6×7, 6×9, 6×4.5), but these numbers should not be interpreted as exact in computing aspect ratios. For example, the usable height of 120-format roll film is 56mm, so a width of 70mm (as in 6×7) yields an aspect ratio of 4:5 — ideal for enlarging to make an 8×10" portrait. Print sizes are usually defined by their portrait dimensions (tall) while equipment aspect ratios are defined by their landscape dimensions (wide, flipped sideways). A good example of this a 4×6 print (6 inch wide by 4 inch tall landscape) perfectly matches the 3:2 aspect ratio of a DSLR/35 mm, since 6/2=3 and 4/2=2.

For analog projection of photographic slides, projector and screen use a 1:1 aspect ratio, supporting horizontal and vertical orientation equally well. In contrast, digital projection technology typically supports vertically oriented images only at a fraction of the resolution of landscape-oriented images. For example, projecting a digital still image having a 3:2 aspect ratio on a 16:9 projector employs 84.3% of available resolution in horizontal orientation, but only 37.5% in vertical orientation.

See also edit

Notes edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ . 27 June 2017. Archived from the original on 2017-06-27.
  2. ^ a b c The 2.39:1 ratio is commonly labeled 2.40:1, e.g., in the American Society of Cinematographers' American Cinematographer Manual (Many widescreen films before the 1970 SMPTE revision used 2.35:1).
  3. ^ . India: Tech Tree. Archived from the original on 2009-01-23.
  4. ^ Burum, Stephen (2004). American Cinematographer Manual (9th ed.). ASC Press. ISBN 0-935578-24-2.
  5. ^ a b c d . Arri. 2011-07-07. Archived from the original on 2012-03-09. Retrieved 2014-06-21.
  6. ^ "Anamorphic Now" (PDF). Film and Digital Times (53): 24–31. April 2013. Retrieved 2014-06-21.
  7. ^ "BlackBerry Passport – Full phone specifications". www.gsmarena.com. Retrieved 2018-11-29.
  8. ^ "Sony SmartWatch 3 SWR50 – Full phone specifications". www.gsmarena.com. Retrieved 2019-01-24.
  9. ^ . Geek.com. 2014-11-20. Archived from the original on 2018-11-30. Retrieved 2018-11-29.
  10. ^ McElhearn, Kirk (2010-02-01). "Why Apple chose the iPad's screen format". Macworld. Retrieved 2019-07-24.
  11. ^ BT.1379 - Framing of wide-screen 16:9 and standard 4:3 aspect ratio productions to achieve a common production format during a transition period to wide-screen 16:9 production and broadcasting (PDF). ITU Radiocommunication Assembly. 1998.
  12. ^ R93-1998 - Compromise Scanned Area Dimensions for Television from 35 mm Wide-Screen Films (PDF). EBU. 1998.
  13. ^ Knight, Dan (2008-09-19). "With 10% of the U.S. Notebook Market, Where Will Apple Go Next?".
  14. ^ a b "Product Planners and Marketers Must Act Before 16:9 Panels Replace Mainstream 16:10 Notebook PC and Monitor LCD Panels, New DisplaySearch Topical Report Advises". DisplaySearch. 2008-07-01. Retrieved 2011-09-08.
  15. ^ Ricker, Thomas (2008-07-02). "Widescreen LCDs going widescreen by 2010". Engadget.
  16. ^ "Screen Resolutions". Net Applications. October 2012. Retrieved 2013-04-20.
  17. ^ "MacBook Pro 16 vs. MacBook Pro 14: All the Differences". Digital Trends. 2021-10-18. Retrieved 2021-11-27.
  18. ^ Apple. "MacBook Air - Technical Specifications". Retrieved 2022-01-07.
  19. ^ Pautz, Michelle C. (2017-12-29). Civil Servants on the Silver Screen: Hollywood's Depiction of Government and Bureaucrats. Lexington Books. p. 31. ISBN 978-1-4985-3913-5.
  20. ^ Berger, John L. (2019). "Aspect Ratios and Camera Formats". www.widescreen.org. Retrieved 2018-10-30.
  21. ^ "Widescreen Museum – CinemaScope Derivatives – Superscope 1". www.widescreenmuseum.com. Retrieved 2018-11-02.
  22. ^ "The Aspect Ratio of 2.00 : 1 is Everywhere | VashiVisuals". vashivisuals.com. Retrieved 2018-11-02.
  23. ^ Eelvee (4 March 2007). ". . : : VITTORIO STORARO : : . .: What is UNIVISIUM?".
  24. ^ O'Falt, Chris (2017-04-04). "What Amazon and Netflix's Demand for 4K Means for Documentaries". IndieWire. Retrieved 2018-05-10.
  25. ^ Petrov, Daniel. "So, what is this 2:1 Univisium display ratio on the LG G6 and likely the S8?". Phone Arena.
  26. ^ The official Honor website 2018-12-03 at the Wayback Machine displays that it has an 18:9 ratio (visit the gaming tab).
  27. ^ "The Man with a Flower in His Mouth (TV Movie 1930) - IMDb" – via www.imdb.com.
  28. ^ Scott Eyman, The Speed of Sound: Hollywood and the Talkie Revolution, 1926–1930, New York, Simon & Schuster (1997), p. 222.
  29. ^ "'The Lighthouse,' 'The Witch' and the Horror of Robert Eggers". The Hollywood Reporter. 29 October 2019. Retrieved 2019-11-10.
  30. ^ Fratti, Karen (20 October 2015). "Grabyo Adds Square, Vertical Video Capabilities". Ad Week. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
  31. ^ Lim, Shawn (27 September 2018). "'Nobody will ask why they need vertical videos now': Snap on why it welcomes competition from rivals". The Drum. Retrieved 28 September 2018.
  32. ^ Alcántara, Ann-Marie (2022-08-08). "Marketers Test YouTube Shorts, One More Rival to TikTok". The Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2023-02-01.
  33. ^ Nowak, Arne (October 2010). "Digital Cinema Technologies from the Archive's Perspective" (PDF). International Federation of Film Archives. p. 4. Retrieved May 16, 2016.
  34. ^ "Picking the Right Aspect Ratio". Simple DCP. January 1, 2018. Retrieved 28 January 2022.
  35. ^ Owen, Aaron (August 14, 2020). "Things to Consider Before Making a DCP: Aspect Ratio & Frame Size". Cinematiq. Retrieved 28 January 2022.
  36. ^ "Aspect Ratio Cheat Sheet". Firehouse Creative. Retrieved 28 January 2022.
  37. ^ a b Kauffman, Jeffrey (September 19, 2020). "The Wild Goose Lake Blu-ray Review". Blu-ray.com. Retrieved 28 January 2022. The Wild Goose Lake is presented on Blu-ray courtesy of Film Movement with an AVC encoded 1080p transfer in 1.90:1.
  38. ^ Goddard, Louis. Philips discontinuing super-wide Cinema 21:9 TVs due to lack of demand. The Verge. 2012-08-28. Retrieved 2013-03-18.
  39. ^ "Voyage of Time: The IMAX® Experience in Ultra-Widescreen". IMAX. Dec 7, 2016. Retrieved April 27, 2018.
  40. ^ Kristopher Tapley (Dec 5, 2016). "'Ultra Widescreen' Version of Terrence Malick's 'Voyage of Time' Set for Release". Variety. Retrieved April 27, 2018.
  41. ^ Aftab, Kaleem. "Introducing Screen X, Cinema in 270 Degrees | Filmmaker Magazine". Filmmaker Magazine. Retrieved 2018-10-12.
  42. ^ "'Kiesza - What Is Love (Official Video)'". YouTube. Retrieved October 10, 2022.

Sources edit

On aspect ratios edit

  • . Archived from the original on 2006-05-21. Retrieved 2006-07-24.
  • The Letterbox and Widescreen Advocacy Page
  • American Widescreen Museum
  • Widescreen Apertures and Aspect Ratios
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived December 7, 2013)
  • Aspect Ratios Explained: Part 2 2013-06-04 at the Wayback Machine
  • Explanation of TV Aspect Ratio format description codes
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived June 24, 2009)
  • SCADplus: 16:9 Action plan for the television in the 16:9 screen format – European Union

aspect, ratio, image, this, article, about, aspect, ratio, still, images, films, digital, imagery, display, aspect, ratio, display, aspect, ratio, common, image, aspect, ratios, 461538, commonly, used, modern, smartphones, 5625, commonly, used, late, 2010s, sm. This article is about aspect ratio of still images films and digital imagery For display aspect ratio see display aspect ratio Common image aspect ratios 461538 1 6 13 Commonly used in modern smartphones 5625 1 9 16 Commonly used in mid late 2010s smartphones 6 1 3 5 Commonly used in early 2010s smartphones 6 1 2 3 Commonly used in late 2000s smartphones1 1Square Aspect ratio of 6 6 medium format still cameras Used in some social networks 1 1875 1 19 16 Fox Movietone aspect ratio1 25 1 5 4 Early televisions also large 4 5 and 8 10 and medium format so called 6 7 still photography1 3 1 4 3 Traditional television amp computer monitor standard also classic 35 mm film standard1 375 1 11 8 Academy standard film aspect ratio1 43 1 143 100 IMAX motion picture film format1 5 1 3 2 Classic 35 mm still photographic film1 5 1 14 9 Used to create an acceptable picture on both 4 3 and 16 9 televisions1 6 1 8 5 A common computer screen ratio1 6180 1 f displaystyle varphi 1 The golden ratio1 6 1 5 3 A common European widescreen standard Paramount format 1 native Super 16 mm film1 7 1 16 9 HD video standard American amp British digital broadcast TV standard1 85 1 37 20 A common American widescreen cinema standard1 8962 1 256 135 DCI standard for 4K amp 2K Digital IMAX2 1Univisium2 2 1 11 5 Standard 70 mm film Super Panavision2 370 1 64 27 Cinematic widescreen 21 9 consumer standard2 35 1 2 39 1 or 2 4 1 47 20 239 100 or 12 5 A current widescreen cinema standard2 414 1 dS 1 The silver ratio2 76 1 69 25 Ultra Panavision 703 5 1 or 3 6 1 32 9 or 18 5 Super Ultrawide Ultra WideScreen 3 64 1Polyvision consisting of three side by side frames of 4 3 Used only in Napoleon 1927 The aspect ratio of an image is the ratio of its width to its height and is expressed with two numbers separated by a colon such as 16 9 sixteen to nine For the x y aspect ratio the image is x units wide and y units high Common aspect ratios are 1 85 1 and 2 39 1 in cinematography 4 3 and 16 9 in television photography and 3 2 in still photography Contents 1 Some common examples 2 Practical limitations 3 Cinema terminology 3 1 Movie camera systems 4 Current video standards 4 1 1 1 Square 4 2 4 3 standard 4 3 14 9 standard 4 4 16 10 standard 4 5 1 66 1 1 75 1 amp 16 9 standard widescreen 4 6 1 85 1 4 7 2 1 standard 4 8 2 1 2 2 1 2 35 1 2 39 1 2 4 1 2 55 1 2 76 1 and 21 9 standard widescreen 5 Obtaining height width and area of the screen 6 Distinctions 7 Previous and currently used aspect ratios 8 Aspect ratio releases 8 1 Original aspect ratio OAR 8 2 Modified aspect ratio MAR 9 Problems in film and television 10 Still photography 10 1 1 1 10 2 5 4 10 3 4 3 10 4 3 2 10 5 16 9 10 6 3 1 11 See also 12 Notes 13 Footnotes 14 Sources 14 1 On aspect ratiosSome common examples editThe common film aspect ratios used in cinemas are 1 85 1 and 2 4 1 2 Two common videographic aspect ratios are 4 3 1 3 1 a the universal video format of the 20th century and 16 9 1 7 1 universal for high definition television and European digital television Other cinematic and video aspect ratios exist but are used infrequently In still camera photography the most common aspect ratios are 4 3 3 2 1 5 1 and more recently found in consumer cameras 16 9 3 Other aspect ratios such as 5 3 5 4 and 1 1 square format are used in photography as well particularly in medium format and large format With television DVD and Blu ray Disc converting formats of unequal ratios is achieved by enlarging the original image to fill the receiving format s display area and cutting off any excess picture information zooming and cropping by adding horizontal mattes letterboxing or vertical mattes pillarboxing to retain the original format s aspect ratio by stretching hence distorting the image to fill the receiving format s ratio or by scaling by different factors in both directions possibly scaling by a different factor in the center and at the edges as in Wide Zoom mode Practical limitations editIn motion picture formats the physical size of the film area between the sprocket perforations determines the image s size The universal standard established by William Dickson and Thomas Edison in 1892 is a frame that is four perforations high The film itself is 35 mm wide 1 38 in but the area between the perforations is 24 89 mm 18 67 mm 0 980 in 0 735 in leaving the de facto ratio of 4 3 or 1 3 1 4 With a space designated for the standard optical soundtrack and the frame size reduced to maintain an image that is wider than tall this resulted in the Academy aperture of 22 mm 16 mm 0 866 in 0 630 in or 1 375 1 aspect ratio Cinema terminology editThe motion picture industry convention assigns a value of 1 0 to the image s height an anamorphic frame since 1970 approximately 2 4 1 is often incorrectly described rounded as 2 40 1 or 2 40 two four oh After 1952 a number of aspect ratios were experimented with for anamorphic productions including 2 66 1 and 2 55 1 5 A SMPTE specification for anamorphic projection from 1957 PH22 106 1957 finally standardized the aperture to 2 35 1 5 An update in 1970 PH22 106 1971 changed the aspect ratio to 2 39 1 in order to make splices less noticeable 5 This aspect ratio of 2 39 1 was confirmed by the most recent revision from August 1993 SMPTE 195 1993 5 In American cinemas the common projection ratios are 1 85 1 and 2 39 1 Some European countries have 1 6 1 as the wide screen standard The Academy ratio of 1 375 1 was used for all cinema films in the sound era until 1953 with the release of George Stevens Shane in 1 6 1 During that time television which had a similar aspect ratio of 1 3 1 became a perceived threat to movie studios Hollywood responded by creating a large number of wide screen formats CinemaScope up to 2 6 1 Todd AO 2 20 1 and VistaVision initially 1 50 1 now 1 6 1 to 2 00 1 to name just a few The flat 1 85 1 aspect ratio was introduced in May 1953 and became one of the most common cinema projection standards in the United States and elsewhere The goal of these various lenses and aspect ratios was to capture as much of the frame as possible onto as large an area of the film as possible in order to fully utilize the film being used Some of the aspect ratios were chosen to utilize smaller film sizes in order to save film costs while other aspect ratios were chosen to use larger film sizes in order to produce a wider higher resolution image In either case the image was squeezed horizontally to fit the film s frame size and avoid any unused film area 6 Movie camera systems edit The development of various film camera systems must ultimately cater to the placement of the frame in relation to the lateral constraints of the perforations and the optical soundtrack area One clever wide screen alternative VistaVision used standard 35 mm film running sideways through the camera gate so that the sprocket holes were above and below frame allowing a larger horizontal negative size per frame as only the vertical size was now restricted by the perforations There were even a limited number of projectors constructed to also run the print film horizontally Generally however the 1 50 1 ratio of the initial VistaVision image was optically converted to a vertical print on standard four perforation 35 mm movie film to show with the standard projectors available at theaters and was then masked in the projector to the United States standard of 1 85 1 The format was briefly revived by Lucasfilm in the late 1970s for special effects work that required a larger negative size due to image degradation from the optical printing steps necessary to make multi layer composites It went into obsolescence largely due to better cameras lenses and film stocks available for standard four perforation formats in addition to increased lab costs for making prints in comparison to more standard vertical processes The horizontal process was also adapted to 70 mm film by IMAX which was first shown at the Osaka 70 Worlds Fair Super 16 mm film was frequently used for television production due to its lower cost lack of need for soundtrack space on the film itself as it is not projected but rather transferred to video and aspect ratio similar to 16 9 the native ratio of Super 16 mm is 15 9 It also can be blown up to 35 mm for theatrical release and therefore is sometimes used for feature films Current video standards edit1 1 Square edit Square displays are rarely used in devices 7 8 and monitors 9 Nonetheless video consumption on social apps has grown rapidly and led to the emergence of new video formats more suited to mobile devices that can be held in horizontal and vertical orientations In that sense square video was popularized by mobile apps such as Instagram and Vine and has since been supported by other major social platforms including Facebook and Twitter It can fill nearly twice as much screen space compared to 16 9 format when the device is held differently while viewing from how video was recorded 4 3 standard edit Main article Fullscreen aspect ratio 4 3 1 33 1 generally read as Four Three Four by Three or Four to Three for standard television for fullscreen aspect ratio 1 33 1 has been in use since the invention of moving picture cameras and many computer monitors used to employ the same aspect ratio 4 3 was the aspect ratio used for 35 mm films in the silent era It is also very close to the 1 375 1 Academy ratio defined by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences as a standard after the advent of optical sound on film By having TV match this aspect ratio movies originally photographed on 35 mm film could be satisfactorily viewed on TV in the early days of the medium i e the 1940s and the 1950s With the adoption of high definition television the majority of modern televisions are now produced with 16 9 displays instead Apple s iPad series of tablets continue to use 4 3 displays despite other Apple products typically using widescreen aspect ratios to better suit use as an e reader however the 2018 iPad Pro 11 inch uses a 1 43 1 aspect ratio 10 14 9 standard edit Main article 14 9 aspect ratio 14 9 generally named as Fourteen by Nine Fourteen Nine and Fourteen to Nine is the aspect ratio mainly used when the 4 3 programs are cropped 11 12 16 10 standard edit Main article 16 10 aspect ratio 16 10 8 5 is an aspect ratio mostly used for computer displays and tablet computers The width of the display is 1 6 times its height This ratio is close to the golden ratio f displaystyle varphi nbsp which is approximately 1 618 LCD computer displays using the 16 10 ratio started to appear in the mass market from 2003 By 2008 16 10 had become the most common aspect ratio for LCD monitors and laptop displays 13 Since 2010 however 16 9 has become the mainstream standard driven by the 1080p standard for high definition television and lower manufacturing costs 14 15 In 2005 2008 16 10 1 6 1 overtook 4 3 as the most sold aspect ratio for LCD monitors At the time 16 10 also had 90 of the notebook market and was the most commonly used aspect ratio for laptops 14 However 16 10 had a short reign as the most common aspect ratio Around 2008 2010 there was a rapid shift by computer display manufacturers to the 16 9 aspect ratio and by 2011 16 10 had almost disappeared from new mass market products According to Net Applications by October 2012 the market share of 16 10 displays had dropped to less than 23 percent 16 Notably Apple used 16 10 for all of its MacBook models until 2021 when the 5th generation MacBook Pro switched to a taller aspect ratio of approximately 1 54 1 17 The MacBook Air continues to use 16 10 as of 2022 18 1 66 1 1 75 1 amp 16 9 standard widescreen edit Main article 16 9 aspect ratio 16 9 1 77 1 generally named as Sixteen by Nine Sixteen Nine and Sixteen to Nine is the international standard format of HDTV non HD digital television and analog widescreen television PALplus Japan s Hi Vision originally started with a 5 3 15 9 ratio but converted when the international standards group introduced a wider ratio of 5 1 3 to 3 16 9 Many digital video cameras have the capability to record in 16 9 42 32 and 16 9 is the only widescreen aspect ratio natively supported by the DVD standard DVD producers can also choose to show even wider ratios such as 1 66 1 1 75 1 1 77 1 and 1 78 1 2 within the 16 9 DVD frame by hard matting or adding black bars within the image itself The 16 9 aspect ratio was used often in British TVs in the United Kingdom in the 1990s and is also used in some smartphones laptops and desktops 1 85 1 edit Equivalent to integer ratio of 37 20 When cinema attendance dropped Hollywood created widescreen aspect ratios in order to differentiate the film industry from TV with one of the most common being the 1 85 1 ratio 19 20 2 1 standard edit Main article Univisium The 2 1 aspect ratio was first used in the 1950s for the RKO Superscope format 21 22 Since 1998 cinematographer Vittorio Storaro has advocated for a format named Univisium that uses a 2 1 format 23 It is designed to be a compromise between the cinema 2 39 1 aspect ratio and the HD TV broadcast 16 9 ratio Univisium has gained little traction in the theatrical film market but has recently been used by Netflix and Amazon Video for productions such as House of Cards and Transparent respectively This aspect ratio is similar to the 1 9 1 standard acquisition formats mandated by these content platforms and is not necessarily a creative choice 24 Moreover some mobile devices such as the LG G6 LG V30 Huawei Mate 10 Pro Google Pixel 2 XL OnePlus 5T and Sony Xperia XZ3 are embracing the 2 1 format advertised as 18 9 as well as the Samsung Galaxy S8 Samsung Galaxy Note 8 Samsung Galaxy S9 and Samsung Galaxy Note 9 with a slightly similar 18 5 9 format 25 26 The Apple iPhone X also has a similar screen ratio of 19 5 9 2 16 1 2 1 2 2 1 2 35 1 2 39 1 2 4 1 2 55 1 2 76 1 and 21 9 standard widescreen edit Main articles Anamorphic format and 21 9 aspect ratio Anamorphic format is the cinematography technique of shooting a widescreen picture on standard 35 mm film or other visual recording media with a non widescreen native aspect ratio When projected images have an approximate 2 1 2 2 1 2 35 1 2 39 1 2 4 1 2 55 1 and 2 76 1 all of which are often rounded to 21 9 aspect ratio 21 9 aspect ratio is actually 64 27 43 33 or approximately 2 37 1 and is near both cinematic movie aspect ratios Most Indian Bollywood films were shot in the 1 37 1 ratio until 1972 when 2 39 1 became standard for all Bollywood movies Obtaining height width and area of the screen editOften screen specifications are given by their diagonal length The following formulae can be used to find the height h width w and area A where r stands for ratio written as a fraction of x by y and d for diagonal length r x y displaystyle r frac x y nbsp h d r 2 1 y d x 2 y 2 displaystyle h frac d sqrt r 2 1 frac y times d sqrt x 2 y 2 nbsp w r d r 2 1 x d x 2 y 2 displaystyle w frac r times d sqrt r 2 1 frac x times d sqrt x 2 y 2 nbsp A r d 2 r 2 1 x y d 2 x 2 y 2 displaystyle A frac r times d 2 r 2 1 quad frac x times y times d 2 x 2 y 2 nbsp Distinctions editThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is content overlaps with section Pixel aspect ratio Introduction Please help improve this section if you can May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message This article primarily addresses the aspect ratio of images as displayed which is more formally referred to as the display aspect ratio DAR In digital images there is a distinction with the storage aspect ratio SAR which is the ratio of numbers of pixels If an image is displayed with square pixels then these ratios agree If instead non square rectangular pixels are used then these ratios differ The aspect ratio of the pixels themselves is known as the pixel aspect ratio PAR for square pixels this is 1 1 and these are related by the identity SAR PAR DARRearranging solving for PAR yields PAR DAR SARFor example A 640 480 VGA image has a SAR of 640 480 4 3 and if displayed on a 4 3 display DAR 4 3 has square pixels hence a PAR of 1 1 By contrast a 720 576 D 1 PAL image has a SAR of 720 576 5 4 but is displayed on a 4 3 display DAR 4 3 so by this formula it would have a PAR of 4 3 5 4 16 15 However because standard definition digital video was originally based on digitally sampling analog television the 720 horizontal pixels actually capture a slightly wider image to avoid loss of the original analog picture In actual images these extra pixels are often partly or entirely black as only the center 704 horizontal pixels carry actual 4 3 or 16 9 image Hence the actual pixel aspect ratio PAR for PAL video is a little different from that given by the formula specifically 12 11 for PAL and 10 11 for NTSC For consistency the same effective pixel aspect ratios are used even for standard definition digital video originated in digital form rather than converted from analog For more details refer to the main article In analog images such as film there is no notion of pixel nor notion of SAR or PAR and aspect ratio refers unambiguously to DAR Actual displays do not generally have non square pixels though digital sensors might they are rather a mathematical abstraction used in resampling images to convert between resolutions Non square pixels arise often in early digital TV standards related to digitalization of analog TV signals whose horizontal and vertical resolutions differ and are thus best described by non square pixels and also in some digital videocameras and computer display modes such as Color Graphics Adapter CGA Today they arise particularly in transcoding between resolutions with different SARs DAR is also known as image aspect ratio and picture aspect ratio though the latter can be confused with pixel aspect ratio PAR is also known as sample aspect ratio though it can also be confused with storage aspect ratio Previous and currently used aspect ratios editFor a listing of computer resolutions and aspect ratios see list of common resolutions For a full listing of film formats including their aspect ratios see list of film formats nbsp Comparison of several film aspect ratios with the heights forced to be equal1 2 32 The first television aspect ratio used by John Logie Baird s 30 line mechanical television in the early 1930s 27 1 19 1 19 16 Sometimes referred to as the Movietone ratio this ratio was used briefly during the transitional period when the film industry was converting to sound from 1926 to 1932 approx It is produced by superimposing an optical soundtrack over a full gate 1 3 aperture in printing resulting in an almost square image Films shot in this ratio are often projected or transferred to video incorrectly using a 1 375 1 mask or squashed to 1 375 1 Examples of films shot in the Movietone ratio include Sunrise A Song of Two Humans M Hallelujah and significantly more recently The Lighthouse 28 29 A trend arising from the widespread use of smartphones is vertical video that is intended for viewing in portrait mode The format was popularized in particular by apps such as Snapchat Instagram and YouTube which all offer means for publishing vertical videos as content and advertising 30 31 32 1 25 1 5 4 The once popular aspect for larger format computer monitors especially in the guise of mass produced 17 and 19 LCD panels or 19 and 21 CRTs using 1280 1024 SXGA or similar resolutions Notably one of the few popular display aspect ratios narrower than 4 3 and one popularised by business CAD DTP rather than entertainment use as it is well suited to full page layout editing Historically 5 4 was also the original aspect ratio of early 405 line television broadcasts which progressed to a wider 4 3 as the idea of broadcasting cinema films gained traction 1 3 1 4 3 12 9 35 mm original silent film ratio today commonly known in TV and video as 4 3 Also standard ratio for MPEG 2 video compression This format is still used in many personal video cameras today and has influenced the selection or design of other aspect ratios It is the standard Super 35 mm ratio 1 37 1 48 35 16 mm and 35 mm standard ratio 1 375 1 11 8 35 mm full screen sound film image nearly universal in films between 1932 and 1953 Officially adopted as the Academy ratio in 1932 by AMPAS Rarely used in theatrical context nowadays but occasionally used in other contexts 1 43 1 IMAX format IMAX productions use 70 mm wide film the same as used for 70 mm feature films but the film runs through the camera and projector horizontally This allows for a physically larger area for each image 1 5 1 3 2 The aspect ratio of 35 mm film used for still photography when eight perforations are exposed Also the native aspect ratio of VistaVision for which the film runs horizontally Used on the ChromeOS based Chromebook Pixel notebook PC the Game Boy Advance portable game console the Surface Pro 3 laplet and Surface Studio 1 5 1 14 9 Widescreen aspect ratio sometimes used in shooting commercials etc as a compromise format between 4 3 and 16 9 When converted to a 16 9 frame there is slight pillarboxing while conversion to 4 3 creates slight letterboxing All widescreen content on ABC Family s SD feed until January 2016 was presented in this ratio 1 6 1 16 10 8 5 Widescreen computer monitor ratio for instance 1920 1200 resolution 1 6 1 5 3 15 9 35 mm widescreen ratio originally invented by Paramount Pictures later a standard among several European countries which It is also the native Super 16 mm frame ratio Sometimes this ratio is rounded to 1 67 1 From the late 1980s to the early 2000s Walt Disney Feature Animation s CAPS program animated their features in the 1 6 1 ratio a compromise between the 1 85 1 theatrical ratio and the 1 3 1 ratio used for home video this format is also used by the Nintendo 3DS s top screen 1 75 1 7 4 Early 35 mm widescreen ratio primarily used by MGM and Warner Bros between 1953 and 1955 and since abandoned though Disney has cropped some of its post 1950s full screen films to this ratio for DVD including The Jungle Book 1 7 1 16 9 42 32 Video widescreen standard used in high definition television one of three ratios specified for MPEG 2 video compression Also used increasingly in personal video cameras Sometimes this ratio is rounded to 1 78 1 1 85 1 37 20 35 mm American and British widescreen standard for theatrical film Introduced by Universal Pictures in May 1953 Projects approximately three perforations perfs of image space per four perf frame films can be shot in 3 perf to save cost of film stock Also the ratio of Ultra 16 mm One of two common formats in digital cinema where it is called flat 1 875 1 15 8 HDTV ratio used by Silicon Graphics computers in the 1990s with the resolution being specified as 1920 1024 1 8962 1 256 135 SMPTE DCI digital cinema basic resolution container aspect ratio sometimes rounded to 1 896 1 33 or 1 9 1 34 35 also given as 1 90 1 36 37 Used by Diao Yinan s The Wild Goose Lake 37 2 1 18 9 Recently popularized by the Red Digital Cinema Original SuperScope ratio also used in Univisium Used as a flat ratio for some American studios in the 1950s and abandoned in the 1960s Also used in recent mobile phones such as the LG G6 Google Pixel 2 XL HTC U11 Xiaomi MIX 2S and Huawei Mate 10 Pro while the Samsung Galaxy S8 Note 8 and S9 use the similar 18 5 9 ratio 2 165 1 28 13 Used by the screens of some iPhone models since 2017 including the iPhone X XS XS Max 11 11 Pro and 11 Pro Max 2 208 1 11 5 70 mm standard Originally developed for Todd AO in the 1950s Specified in MPEG 2 as 2 20 1 but hardly used 2 35 1 47 20 35 mm anamorphic prior to 1970 used by CinemaScope Scope and early Panavision The anamorphic standard has subtly changed so that contemporary anamorphic productions are actually 2 39 1 2 but often referred to as 2 35 1 anyway due to old convention Anamorphic refers to the compression of the image on film to maximize an area slightly taller than standard 4 perf Academy aperture but presents the widest of aspect ratios All Indian Bollywood films released after 1972 are shot in this standard for theatrical exhibition clarification needed 2 370 1 64 27 43 33 TVs were produced with this aspect ratio between 2009 and 2012 38 and marketed as 21 9 cinema displays But this aspect ratio is still seen on some higher end monitors which are sometimes called UltraWide monitors 2 39 1 43 18 21 1 2 9 35 mm anamorphic from 1970 onwards Aspect ratio of current anamorphic widescreen theatrical viewings commercials and some music videos Often commercially branded as Panavision format or Scope One of two common formats in digital cinema where it is called scope 2 4 1 12 5 Rounded notation of 2 39 1 also as 2 40 1 Blu ray Disc film releases may use only 800 instead of 803 or 804 lines of the 1920 1080 resolution resulting in an even 2 4 1 aspect ratio 2 55 1 51 20 Original aspect ratio of CinemaScope before optical sound was added to the film in 1954 This was also the aspect ratio of CinemaScope 55 2 59 1 70 27 Cinerama at full height three specially captured 35 mm images projected side by side into one composite widescreen image 2 6 1 8 3 24 9 Full frame output from Super 16 mm negative when an anamorphic lens system has been used Effectively an image that is of the ratio 24 9 is squashed onto the native 15 9 aspect ratio of a Super 16 mm negative Also used by Kirill Serebrennikov for Leto 2018 2 76 1 69 25 Ultra Panavision 70 MGM Camera 65 65 mm with 1 25 anamorphic squeeze Used only on a handful of films between 1957 and 1966 and some in the 2010s for some sequences of How the West Was Won 1962 with a slight crop when converted to three strip Cinerama and films such as It s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World 1963 and Ben Hur 1959 More recently Quentin Tarantino used it for The Hateful Eight 2015 Gareth Edwards used the process for shooting Rogue One 2016 but the image was cropped to 2 39 1 in post 3 5 1 32 9 In 2017 Samsung and Phillips announced Super UltraWide displays with aspect ratio of 32 9 3 6 1 18 5 In 2016 IMAX announced the release of films in Ultra WideScreen 3 6 format 39 with an aspect ratio of 36 10 40 Ultra WideScreen 3 6 video format didn t spread as cinemas in an even wider ScreenX 270 format were released 41 4 1 Rare use of Polyvision three 35 mm 1 3 1 images projected side by side First used in 1927 on Abel Gance s Napoleon 42 12 1 Circle Vision 360 developed by the Walt Disney Company in 1955 for use in Disneyland Uses nine 4 3 35 mm projectors to show an image that completely surrounds the viewer Used in subsequent Disney theme parks and other past applications Aspect ratio releases editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Original aspect ratio OAR edit Original Aspect Ratio OAR is a home cinema term for the aspect ratio or dimensions in which a film or visual production was produced as envisioned by the people involved in the creation of the work As an example the film Gladiator was released to theaters in the 2 39 1 aspect ratio It was filmed in Super 35 and in addition to being presented in cinemas and television in the Original Aspect Ratio of 2 39 1 it was also broadcast without the matte altering the aspect ratio to the television standard of 1 3 1 Because of the varied ways in which films are shot IAR Intended Aspect Ratio is a more appropriate term but is rarely used Modified aspect ratio MAR edit Modified Aspect Ratio is a home cinema term for the aspect ratio or dimensions in which a film was modified to fit a specific type of screen as opposed to original aspect ratio Modified aspect ratios are usually either 1 3 1 historically or with the advent of widescreen television sets 1 7 1 aspect ratio 1 3 1 was the modified aspect ratio used historically on 4 3 broadcast television and home videotape formats such as VHS and Beta A modified aspect ratio transfer is achieved by means of pan and scan or EAR Expanded Aspect Ratio open matte the latter meaning removing the cinematic matte from a 1 85 1 film to open up the full 1 3 1 frame or from 2 39 1 to 1 9 1 in IMAX Another name for it is rescaled aspect ratio Problems in film and television edit nbsp A windowboxed imageThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Multiple aspect ratios create additional burdens on directors and the public and confusion among TV broadcasters It is common for a widescreen film to be presented in an altered format cropped letterboxed or expanded beyond the original aspect ratio It is also not uncommon for windowboxing to occur when letterbox and pillarbox happen simultaneously For instance a 16 9 broadcast could embed a 4 3 commercial within the 16 9 image area A viewer watching on a standard 4 3 non widescreen television would see a 4 3 image of the commercial with 2 sets of black stripes vertical and horizontal windowboxing or the postage stamp effect A similar scenario may also occur for a widescreen set owner when viewing 16 9 material embedded in a 4 3 frame and then watching that in 16 9 Active Format Description is a mechanism used in digital broadcasting to avoid this problem It is also common that a 4 3 image is stretched horizontally to fit a 16 9 screen to avoid pillarboxing but distorts the image so subjects appear short and fat Both PAL and NTSC have provision for some data pulses contained within the video signal used to signal the aspect ratio See ITU R BT 1119 1 Widescreen signaling for broadcasting These pulses are detected by television sets that have widescreen displays and cause the television to automatically switch to 16 9 display mode When 4 3 material is included such as the aforementioned commercial the television switches to a 4 3 display mode to correctly display the material Where a video signal is transmitted via a European SCART connection one of the status lines is used to signal 16 9 material as well Still photography editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Common aspect ratios in still photography include 1 1 1 0 1 5 4 1 25 1 4 3 1 3 1 3 2 1 5 1 5 3 1 6 1 16 9 1 7 1 3 1 3 0 1 Many digital still cameras offer user options for selecting multiple image aspect ratios Some achieve this through the use of multi aspect sensors notably Panasonic while others simply crop their native image format to have the output match the desired image aspect ratio 1 1 edit 1 1 is the classic Kodak image and is available as a choice in some digital still cameras and hearkens back to the days of film cameras when the square image was popular with photographers using twin lens reflex cameras These medium format cameras used 120 film rolled onto spools The 6 6 cm image size was the classic 1 1 format in the recent past 120 film can still be found and used today Many Polaroid instant films were designed as square formats Furthermore up until August 2015 photo sharing site Instagram only allowed users to upload images in 1 1 format In 2017 Fujifilm added the 1 1 Instax Square format to their lineup of instant film cameras 5 4 edit Common in large and medium format photography 6x7 cameras actual size 56mm x 70mm which fits the common print paper size of 8 10 without cropping and is still in common use for prints from digital cameras 4 3 edit 4 3 is used by most digital point and shoot cameras Four Thirds system Micro Four Thirds system cameras and medium format 645 cameras The 4 3 digital format popularity was developed to match the then prevailing digital displays of the time 4 3 computer monitors The next several formats have their roots in classic film photography image sizes both the classic 35 mm film camera and the multiple format Advanced Photo System APS film camera The APS camera was capable of selecting any of three image formats APS H High Definition mode APS C Classic mode and APS P Panoramic mode 3 2 edit 3 2 is used by classic 35 mm film cameras using a 36 mm 24 mm image size and their digital derivatives represented by DSLRs Typical DSLRs come in two flavors the so called professional full frame 36 mm 24 mm sensors and variations of smaller so called APS C sensors The term APS is derived from another film format known as APS and the C refers to Classic mode which exposed images over a smaller area 25 1 mm 16 7 mm but retaining the same classic 3 2 proportions as full frame 35 mm film cameras When discussing DSLRs and their non SLR derivatives the term APS C has become an almost generic term The two major camera manufacturers Canon and Nikon each developed and established sensor standards for their own versions of APS C sized and proportioned sensors Canon actually developed two standards APS C and a slightly larger area APS H not to be confused with the APS H film format while Nikon developed its own APS C standard which it calls DX Regardless of the different flavors of sensors and their varying sizes they are close enough to the original APS C image size and maintain the classic 3 2 image proportions that these sensors are generally known as an APS C sized sensor The reason for DSLR s image sensors being the flatter 3 2 versus the taller point and shoot 4 3 is that DSLRs were designed to match the legacy 35 mm SLR film whereas the majority of digital cameras were designed to match the predominant computer displays of the time with VGA SVGA XGA and UXGA all being 4 3 Widescreen computer monitors did not become popular until the advent of HDTV which uses a 16 9 image aspect ratio 16 9 edit Known as APS H 30 2 mm 16 7 mm with the H denoting High Definition the 16 9 format is also the standard image aspect ratio for HDTV 16 9 is gaining popularity as a format in all classes of consumer still cameras which also shoot High Definition HD video When still cameras have an HD video capability some can also record stills in the 16 9 format ideal for display on HD televisions and widescreen computer displays 3 1 edit 3 1 is yet another format that can find its roots in the APS film camera Known as APS P 30 2 9 5 mm with the P denoting Panorama the 3 1 format was used for panorama photography The APS P panorama standard is the least adhered to any APS standard and panoramic implementation varies with by manufacturer on different cameras with the only commonality being that the image is much longer than it is tall in the classic panorama style Common print sizes in the United States in inches include 4 6 1 5 5 7 1 4 4 5 and 8 10 1 25 and 11 14 1 27 large format cameras typically use one of these aspect ratios Medium format cameras typically have format designated by nominal sizes in centimeters 6 6 6 7 6 9 6 4 5 but these numbers should not be interpreted as exact in computing aspect ratios For example the usable height of 120 format roll film is 56mm so a width of 70mm as in 6 7 yields an aspect ratio of 4 5 ideal for enlarging to make an 8 10 portrait Print sizes are usually defined by their portrait dimensions tall while equipment aspect ratios are defined by their landscape dimensions wide flipped sideways A good example of this a 4 6 print 6 inch wide by 4 inch tall landscape perfectly matches the 3 2 aspect ratio of a DSLR 35 mm since 6 2 3 and 4 2 2 For analog projection of photographic slides projector and screen use a 1 1 aspect ratio supporting horizontal and vertical orientation equally well In contrast digital projection technology typically supports vertically oriented images only at a fraction of the resolution of landscape oriented images For example projecting a digital still image having a 3 2 aspect ratio on a 16 9 projector employs 84 3 of available resolution in horizontal orientation but only 37 5 in vertical orientation See also editActive Format Description AFD Index of articles related to motion pictures Paper size Shoot and protect Glossary of video terms Ultrawide formatsNotes edit Repeating decimal notationFootnotes edit BBC Academy Academy Beyond HD 27 June 2017 Archived from the original on 2017 06 27 a b c The 2 39 1 ratio is commonly labeled 2 40 1 e g in the American Society of Cinematographers American Cinematographer Manual Many widescreen films before the 1970 SMPTE revision used 2 35 1 Panasonic Introduces 2 New Cameras India Tech Tree Archived from the original on 2009 01 23 Burum Stephen 2004 American Cinematographer Manual 9th ed ASC Press ISBN 0 935578 24 2 a b c d ALEXA Anamorphic De squeeze Arri 2011 07 07 Archived from the original on 2012 03 09 Retrieved 2014 06 21 Anamorphic Now PDF Film and Digital Times 53 24 31 April 2013 Retrieved 2014 06 21 BlackBerry Passport Full phone specifications www gsmarena com Retrieved 2018 11 29 Sony SmartWatch 3 SWR50 Full phone specifications www gsmarena com Retrieved 2019 01 24 Eizo s 27 inch 3K display is perfectly square Geek com Geek com 2014 11 20 Archived from the original on 2018 11 30 Retrieved 2018 11 29 McElhearn Kirk 2010 02 01 Why Apple chose the iPad s screen format Macworld Retrieved 2019 07 24 BT 1379 Framing of wide screen 16 9 and standard 4 3 aspect ratio productions to achieve a common production format during a transition period to wide screen 16 9 production and broadcasting PDF ITU Radiocommunication Assembly 1998 R93 1998 Compromise Scanned Area Dimensions for Television from 35 mm Wide Screen Films PDF EBU 1998 Knight Dan 2008 09 19 With 10 of the U S Notebook Market Where Will Apple Go Next a b Product Planners and Marketers Must Act Before 16 9 Panels Replace Mainstream 16 10 Notebook PC and Monitor LCD Panels New DisplaySearch Topical Report Advises DisplaySearch 2008 07 01 Retrieved 2011 09 08 Ricker Thomas 2008 07 02 Widescreen LCDs going widescreen by 2010 Engadget Screen Resolutions Net Applications October 2012 Retrieved 2013 04 20 MacBook Pro 16 vs MacBook Pro 14 All the Differences Digital Trends 2021 10 18 Retrieved 2021 11 27 Apple MacBook Air Technical Specifications Retrieved 2022 01 07 Pautz Michelle C 2017 12 29 Civil Servants on the Silver Screen Hollywood s Depiction of Government and Bureaucrats Lexington Books p 31 ISBN 978 1 4985 3913 5 Berger John L 2019 Aspect Ratios and Camera Formats www widescreen org Retrieved 2018 10 30 Widescreen Museum CinemaScope Derivatives Superscope 1 www widescreenmuseum com Retrieved 2018 11 02 The Aspect Ratio of 2 00 1 is Everywhere VashiVisuals vashivisuals com Retrieved 2018 11 02 Eelvee 4 March 2007 VITTORIO STORARO What is UNIVISIUM O Falt Chris 2017 04 04 What Amazon and Netflix s Demand for 4K Means for Documentaries IndieWire Retrieved 2018 05 10 Petrov Daniel So what is this 2 1 Univisium display ratio on the LG G6 and likely the S8 Phone Arena The official Honor website Archived 2018 12 03 at the Wayback Machine displays that it has an 18 9 ratio visit the gaming tab The Man with a Flower in His Mouth TV Movie 1930 IMDb via www imdb com Scott Eyman The Speed of Sound Hollywood and the Talkie Revolution 1926 1930 New York Simon amp Schuster 1997 p 222 The Lighthouse The Witch and the Horror of Robert Eggers The Hollywood Reporter 29 October 2019 Retrieved 2019 11 10 Fratti Karen 20 October 2015 Grabyo Adds Square Vertical Video Capabilities Ad Week Retrieved 24 July 2016 Lim Shawn 27 September 2018 Nobody will ask why they need vertical videos now Snap on why it welcomes competition from rivals The Drum Retrieved 28 September 2018 Alcantara Ann Marie 2022 08 08 Marketers Test YouTube Shorts One More Rival to TikTok The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 2023 02 01 Nowak Arne October 2010 Digital Cinema Technologies from the Archive s Perspective PDF International Federation of Film Archives p 4 Retrieved May 16 2016 Picking the Right Aspect Ratio Simple DCP January 1 2018 Retrieved 28 January 2022 Owen Aaron August 14 2020 Things to Consider Before Making a DCP Aspect Ratio amp Frame Size Cinematiq Retrieved 28 January 2022 Aspect Ratio Cheat Sheet Firehouse Creative Retrieved 28 January 2022 a b Kauffman Jeffrey September 19 2020 The Wild Goose Lake Blu ray Review Blu ray com Retrieved 28 January 2022 The Wild Goose Lake is presented on Blu ray courtesy of Film Movement with an AVC encoded 1080p transfer in 1 90 1 Goddard Louis Philips discontinuing super wide Cinema 21 9 TVs due to lack of demand The Verge 2012 08 28 Retrieved 2013 03 18 Voyage of Time The IMAX Experience in Ultra Widescreen IMAX Dec 7 2016 Retrieved April 27 2018 Kristopher Tapley Dec 5 2016 Ultra Widescreen Version of Terrence Malick s Voyage of Time Set for Release Variety Retrieved April 27 2018 Aftab Kaleem Introducing Screen X Cinema in 270 Degrees Filmmaker Magazine Filmmaker Magazine Retrieved 2018 10 12 Kiesza What Is Love Official Video YouTube Retrieved October 10 2022 Sources edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aspect ratio On aspect ratios edit NEC Monitor Technology Guide Archived from the original on 2006 05 21 Retrieved 2006 07 24 The Letterbox and Widescreen Advocacy Page American Widescreen Museum Widescreen Apertures and Aspect Ratios Aspect combined aspect ratio frame size and bitrate calculator at the Wayback Machine archived December 7 2013 Aspect Ratios Explained Part 1 Part 2 Archived 2013 06 04 at the Wayback Machine Explanation of TV Aspect Ratio format description codes IMDb Number of DVDs for each aspect ratio at the Wayback Machine archived June 24 2009 SCADplus 16 9 Action plan for the television in the 16 9 screen format European Union Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aspect ratio image amp oldid 1188789700, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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