My first job as a kid was working for a photographer. We used 4x5 Crown Graphics, Roliflexs and the occasinal Lecia rangerfinder.
Ninety-nine percent of everything we did was with the 4x5. We even used it for portraits in a camera that would hold up to 8x10 sheet film.
The guy I worked for started in the photo business in 1905. He called all us young whippersnappers..."moderns"! Yuppers.
This guy was so old fashioned that "back in the day" he used flashpowder. He had to cameras he called "circuit cameras" that took the panoramic pictures you see in museums. While I was working for him in the early fifties, he even used them a couple of times on jobs. The jobs I remember were Phillips Petroleum Company stockholder meetings.
One of these cameras used a five inch wide, paper backed, roll film and the other used the same type film in seven inch width.
The original films for these cameras, Eastman Kodak had since quit manufacturing, however he modified them to use a film that had been developed prior to WWII for use in the big, aerial cameras.
We printed these long negatives on a home made contact printer.
I remember the "original" Kodachrome quite well. I loved the color temperature of it. It had an ASA of 10, and then in the fifties they made one at 25. It was just not the same.
I never like Ektachorme. It had a too blueish-green color temperature.
Remember the old Ansco color film? It was very "warm", as well as the Agfa.
Today, I have no photo equipment except digital. I loved the old, quality cameras. They just seem so useless today.
I miss them...but I got rid of all of mine.