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.
View profile →compact-35mm
The Nikon One Touch L35AD3 (1988) is a mid-generation AF compact from Nikon's consumer line, part of the "One Touch" branding Nikon used in North America to market its autofocus point-and-shoot cameras. Like its predecessors the L35AF and L35AF-2, it pairs a fixed 35mm f/2.8 Nikkor lens with active autofocus and program-only AE, keeping the formula approachable for casual photographers. The "AD3" designation marks it as the third significant revision of the L35-series body design. AA battery operation continues the line's practical advantage over competitors relying on specialty lithium cells.
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.
View profile →C41
Kodak Gold 200 is a daylight-balanced C-41 color negative film with warm color, moderate grain, and a classic consumer-film look.
View profile →C41
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.
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Labs in our directory that process 35mm film.
Before you buy used
About this camera
Late-1980s Nikon AF compact: 35mm f/2.8 Nikkor, AA batteries, program-only simplicity.
| Field | Value |
|---|
| Format | 35mm |
| Lens | Nikkor 35mm f/2.8 |
| Years | 1988 – ~ |
| Shutter | ~1/8s – ~1/500s, electronic leaf |
| Modes | Program only |
| Battery | 2x AA |
| ISO range | 50 – 3200 |
The L35-series was Nikon's primary consumer AF compact line through the 1980s. The first L35AF (1983) established the formula: 35/2.8 Nikkor, active AF, program AE, AA batteries. The L35AF-2 (1985) brought a modest exterior refresh. By 1988 the L35AD3 continued the line while Nikon simultaneously expanded into zoom-lens compacts (the TW-zoom, Zoom Touch series). The One Touch name in North America unified Nikon's AF compact branding during a period when the market was flooded with similar program cameras from Canon, Minolta, and Olympus. Exact discontinuation date is unverified.
The L35AD3 sits in a useful niche: a Nikon-branded, Nikkor-lensed compact from the late 1980s that remains far cheaper on the used market than the later Nikon 35Ti or 28Ti, yet delivers comparable focal-length coverage and reasonable optics. It is not as sharp wide-open as the Contax T2 or Olympus mju-II, and the program-only exposure system removes creative control, but for casual street and travel work the 35/2.8 Nikkor performs well. For buyers who value AA batteries and want a pocketable Nikon compact without paying premium-compact prices, the L35AD3 is a sensible option.
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.
View profile →BW
Kodak Tri-X 400 is a classic black-and-white film known for strong tonality, visible grain, and documentary character.
View profile →Nikon L35AD3
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