C41
LOMO Negative 400
Lomography Color Negative 400 is a versatile ISO 400 C-41 color negative film with vivid, saturated colors, believed to be a Kodak Alaris-manufactured emulsion, available in 35mm and 120 formats.
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The Lomography Fisheye No.2 (2007) is a 35mm plastic point-and-shoot camera and the direct successor to the Fisheye No.1, sharing its 170-degree circular fisheye lens and fixed hyperfocal focus but adding a built-in electronic flash unit powered by two AA batteries. The flash transforms the camera's usable range from bright daylight into indoor, evening, and nighttime environments — enabling the distinctive circular fisheye look in party, club, and low-light settings where the No.1 would underexpose on ISO 400 film.
Reference
Recommended film stocks for the 35mm format your camera takes.
C41
Lomography Color Negative 400 is a versatile ISO 400 C-41 color negative film with vivid, saturated colors, believed to be a Kodak Alaris-manufactured emulsion, available in 35mm and 120 formats.
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Lomography Color Negative 800 is a high-speed ISO 800 C-41 color negative film widely suspected to be a Kodak-manufactured emulsion, delivering vibrant colors and adequate grain for challenging lighting conditions.
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Before you buy used
About this camera
The sequel to the original Fisheye, the Lomography Fisheye No.2 adds a built-in flash and a hot shoe to the 170-degree circular fisheye formula — enabling indoor and night fisheye shooting that the flashless No.1 could not achieve.
| Field | Value |
|---|
| Format | 35mm (24×36mm) |
| Mount | Fixed (non-interchangeable) |
| Year | 2007–present |
| Lens | Fisheye ~10mm, 170° circular field of view |
| Shutter | Fixed ~1/100s |
| Aperture | Fixed ~f/8 |
| Flash | Built-in electronic flash; hot shoe for external flash |
| Meter | None |
| Focus | Fixed (hyperfocal, ~1m to infinity) |
| Battery | 2x AA (for flash only) |
| Recommended film | ISO 100–400 (daylight); ISO 400 (flash) |
Lomography introduced the Fisheye No.2 in 2007 as an upgrade to the highly popular original Fisheye No.1. The key feedback from No.1 users was that the camera was daylight-limited; indoors and at night it simply did not have enough light for exposures on standard film. The addition of a built-in flash directly addressed this constraint while maintaining the core fisheye experience.
The flash range is modest — covering subjects roughly 0.6m to 3m — but sufficient for the social, party, and event photography that dominated Lomographic use cases. The hot shoe adds flexibility for Lomography's accessory flashes with colored gels, enabling deliberate color-cast effects.
The Fisheye No.2 is the more versatile of the two Lomography fisheye cameras, functioning in any lighting condition where the No.1 was restricted to bright daylight. For photographers who want the circular fisheye aesthetic in indoor or night contexts, the No.2 is the practical choice. Both models remain in production (as of 2026) and are among Lomography's best-selling cameras.
Fixed fisheye lens, non-interchangeable. Accessories: Lomography-brand color gel flash covers (compatible with hot shoe), camera straps, and ever-ready soft case. Multiple colored body variants available through Lomography's store.
Kodak Gold 200 is a daylight-balanced C-41 color negative film with warm color, moderate grain, and a classic consumer-film look.
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 Tri-X 400 is a classic black-and-white film known for strong tonality, visible grain, and documentary character.
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