The 110 cartridge was introduced by Kodak in 1972 with Kodak
Pocket Instamatic cameras with Kodachrome-X, Ektachrome-X, Kodacolor II, and Verichrome Pan film. The new pocket-sized cameras became immediately popular, and soon displaced competing
subminiature cameras, such as the
Minolta 16 series, from the market. The 110 film width is 16 mm. A four-frame strip measures 111 mm. The 16 mm film width allowed Kodachrome film in 110 size to be processed on the existing processing machines that processed movie films in the
Standard 8 mm film and
16 mm film sizes.
Fujifilm stopped manufacturing 110 format film in September 2009. Lomography re-commenced 110 film production in 2011. As of 2024, they offer 110 Black and White, Color Negative, and a variety of experimental stocks such as Lomochrome Purple and Metropolis.
Estes Industries has long marketed several
model rockets, the most notable being the
Astrocam, with a simple 110 camera in the nose; the shutter is triggered when the nose cone separates from the rocket body. Tyco (in their Spy Tech line of toys) made two toy spy cameras in the early 1990s that utilized 110 film, called the Hidden Camera and Reese's Camera. The Reese's Camera was meant to resemble two
Reese's two packs stuck together (it used a generic, likely pre-existing mold, it was just molded in orange and had Reese's stickers on it), while the Hidden Camera came with a removable cardboard cover sleeve with small cutouts for the trigger button and front lens that made it resemble a Good & Plenty candy box. The Hidden Camera had a periscope-like attachment that used a mirror for taking pictures around corners or behind objects. The Hidden Camera's shape and size is similar to that of the Minox B. The only new 110 film available on the market is currently produced by Austrian analogue photography company,
Lomography. ==Design and technical issues==