Instax · ISO 800 Color negative
Instax Mini Color
Fujifilm launched the Instax Mini format in 1998 and it is now, by unit volume, the best-selling instant film product in the world. The print is 62x46mm, roughly credit card sized, in a white plastic frame. The camera handles all exposure decisions automatically. You point it, press the button, the print ejects, you wait two minutes.
The emulsion is ISO 800, which gives the auto-exposure cameras a workable range from indoor party light to outdoor daylight. Color is Fujifilm's typical palette: slightly cool, with skin tones that lean pink and blues that come through accurately. Saturation is higher than what you would get from Fujifilm Superia 400 or Gold 200 in the same scenes, because the emulsion chemistry in Instax is optimized for the small print size rather than enlargement. The colors are punchy at 62x46mm; if you could enlarge them to 8x10 the saturation would look garish.
Sharpness is good for the format. The Instax Mini lens systems are short focal lengths with limited aperture range, and the emulsion grain is fine enough at this scale that the prints look clean. They do not compete with medium format contact prints, but they compete favorably with drugstore 4x6 prints from 35mm, which is the relevant comparison for most people using this product.
Reciprocity is listed at an exponent of 1.0, and Zone Light Meter applies the correction past one second. In practice, Instax Mini cameras do not offer manual shutter control; the auto-exposure system manages everything. The reciprocity specification matters if you are using a third-party Instax printer or a modified camera with shutter override. For standard Instax Mini camera bodies, you are fully in the hands of the automatic system.
Fujifilm also makes Instax Square and Instax Wide in the same basic chemistry, larger print sizes.
How the app handles this stock
- Box speed: ISO 800. Picker exposes pull/push chips so you can shoot it at any speed you want and the meter follows.
- Reciprocity: No reciprocity correction needed; metered time is the shot time.
- Expired film: if you load an old roll, set the expiry year and storage in the app and the ISO scales for you. Color negative decay rates are baked in.