C41
Kodak Portra 400
Kodak Portra 400 is a professional C-41 color negative film known for flexible exposure latitude, natural skin tones, and fine grain.
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The Canon Prima Super (1989, sold globally as **Sure Shot Tele Plus** in North America, **Autoboy Tele 6** in Japan) is a 35mm autofocus zoom point-and-shoot. Fixed 35-70mm f/4-7.6 zoom lens, programmed AE, active autofocus, built-in flash. Polycarbonate body, mid-tier consumer compact for the late-80s family-photo market. There is no manual override — fully automatic, fully programmed.
Reference
Recommended film stocks for the 35mm format your camera takes.
C41
Kodak Portra 400 is a professional C-41 color negative film known for flexible exposure latitude, natural skin tones, and fine grain.
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Kodak Gold 200 is a daylight-balanced C-41 color negative film with warm color, moderate grain, and a classic consumer-film look.
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Kodak UltraMax 400 is a versatile consumer-grade ISO 400 daylight-balanced color negative film with T-grain emulsion, delivering warm Kodak colors, fine-for-speed grain (PGI 46), and wide exposure latitude. Currently in production and available globally as a single-roll and multi-pack.
Develop 35mm film
Labs in our directory that process 35mm film.
Before you buy used
About this camera
A late-80s Canon zoom point-and-shoot. Anonymous in its era, plentiful and cheap today.
| Field | Value |
|---|
| Format | 35mm |
| Lens | Canon zoom 35-70mm f/4-7.6 |
| Years | 1989–1996 |
| Shutter | 2s – 1/500s, electronic leaf |
| Modes | Program only |
| Weight | 280 g |
| Battery | 1× CR123A |
The Prima Super was one entry in Canon's vast late-80s/early-90s point-and-shoot line — Canon released literally dozens of variants under different regional names. Production for this specific body ran roughly 7 years; the line was succeeded by zooms with longer focal ranges (Sure Shot Classic 120, Sure Shot Z135).
For 2026 buyers, the Prima Super and similar late-80s consumer zoom compacts are the cheapest AF film cameras you can buy — typically $40–100 at thrift shops, estate sales, and eBay. The image quality from the f/4-7.6 zoom is mediocre by enthusiast standards but produces recognizable "90s family photo" aesthetics that have become a deliberate stylistic choice for younger film shooters.
This category is sometimes called "zoom era trash compacts" with affection — they're not premium objects, but they shoot film, take batteries readily available, and produce the look that nostalgia trades on.
Lens fixed. Standard hot/cold-shoe doesn't exist on most variants — built-in flash is the only flash.
C41
Kodak ColorPlus 200 is an affordable, consumer-oriented daylight-balanced color negative film at ISO 200. Known for warm, slightly muted color rendition, fine grain, and wide exposure latitude, it is currently in production and widely available in Asia and select global markets.
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Kodak Tri-X 400 is a classic black-and-white film known for strong tonality, visible grain, and documentary character.
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