Kodak Disc film is a no longer supported, photo film format that was intended for the consumer market. I had been introduced by Kodak in 1982.
The film is shaped like a flat disk and is completely housed in a plastic cartridge. Each disc contains fifteen 10 × 8 mm images arranged around the outside of the disc, with the disc rotated 24° between successive images.
The system was a consumer-oriented product, and most cameras are self-contained units with no expansion capabilities. Thanks to the disc film, they are compact and considerably thinner than other cameras. The cameras are very easy to load and unload and are generally fully automated. The cassette has a built-in dark slide to prevent stray light from reaching the film when the disc is removed.
Because the film is run on a disc rather than a spool, the cassette is very thin. The flat nature of the format also led to the potential advantage of greater sharpness over cassette formats with a curved spool (such as Minox film, 110- and 126-film). Disc film has a very thick acetate base, similar thickness to 4 × 5″ sheet film, which keeps the film much flatter than the other formats of the time.

For more information, see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disc_film

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