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 Ricoh R10 (1996) is a slim, program-autoexposure 35mm compact built on the platform established by the Ricoh R1 (1993). Like its predecessor, the R10 uses a fixed Rikenon 30mm f/3.5 lens -- an unusual focal length sitting between the 28mm wide-angle favoured by street photographers and the standard 35mm -- and includes a panoramic mask switch that crops the frame to a 13x36mm strip. The body is one of the thinner 35mm compacts produced in the mid-1990s, sized to slip into a shirt or jacket pocket.
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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Before you buy used
About this camera
Ultra-thin Ricoh compact with a 30mm Rikenon lens and a built-in panoramic mask -- a refined successor to the R1.
| Field | Value |
|---|
| Format | 35mm (24x36mm full; 13x36mm panoramic) |
| Lens | Rikenon 30mm f/3.5 |
| Years | 1996 - ~ |
| Shutter | Electronic leaf: 2s - 1/400s |
| Exposure | Program auto |
| Focus | Autofocus |
| Panoramic | Built-in mask (in-camera crop) |
| Battery | 2x CR2 |
The Ricoh R1 launched in 1993 as an ultra-slim 35mm compact featuring the same 30mm Rikenon lens and panoramic switch. It attracted attention as one of the smallest full-featured autofocus compacts of its generation and sold well enough in Japan and export markets to justify a follow-up. The R10 arrived in 1996, refining the R1's design with a restyled body and minor feature updates while retaining the core 30mm-lens format.
Ricoh was simultaneously developing the premium GR1 line (launched 1996) which positioned 28mm as a serious photographic tool with an f/2.8 aperture and aperture-priority control. The R10 occupied a different tier -- lower price, simpler operation, program-only -- but the 30mm lens gives it a slightly different angle of view from most contemporary compacts, which clustered around 28mm, 35mm, or zoom configurations.
The R10 is a minor camera in the broader Ricoh compact history, notable primarily as the refined successor to the R1. The 30mm focal length is uncommon enough to be interesting -- slightly tighter than a 28mm wide, slightly looser than a 35mm standard -- and the slim body profile remains practical. It is an affordable entry point into Ricoh's film compact line for photographers who want a genuine pocketable 35mm without spending GR1-level money.
The panoramic switch, while a simple optical mask rather than a true format change, was a standard selling point for 1990s mass-market compacts; several manufacturers (Nikon, Olympus, Canon) offered similar implementations across the decade.
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 →Ricoh R10
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