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 Fuji TX-1 (1998, sold as **Hasselblad XPan** under Hasselblad badging in Western markets) is a unique 35mm rangefinder camera offering **dual native formats**: standard 35mm (36×24 mm) and **panoramic 35mm** (65×24 mm — about 2.7× the area of standard 35mm). A switch on the body changes between formats; the panoramic mode uses 65 mm of film width per frame, giving roughly 21 panoramic frames per 36-exposure roll. Three interchangeable lenses (45mm, 90mm, 30mm with finder), aperture-priority autoexposure, electronic vertical-cloth shutter, TTL metering. Joint development of Fujifilm and Hasselblad.
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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Ilford HP5 Plus is a flexible ISO 400 black-and-white film with classic grain and strong push-processing tolerance.
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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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Before you buy used
About this camera
The interchangeable-lens panoramic 35mm rangefinder. 65×24 mm wide negatives, switchable to standard 36×24 mm — the only camera that does both natively.
| Field | Value |
|---|
| Format | 35mm — both 36×24 (24 frames) and 65×24 panoramic (21 frames) per roll |
| Mount | TX/XPan (proprietary bayonet) |
| Years | 1998–2006 (TX-1 1998, XPan II / TX-2 2003) |
| Shutter | 8s – 1/1000s, electronic vertical cloth |
| Flash sync | 1/125s |
| Meter | TTL center-weighted SPD |
| Modes | Aperture priority, manual |
| Weight | 800 g |
| Battery | 2× CR2 |
Released 1998 as Fuji-Hasselblad joint product. Variants:
Production ended 2006. Total production was modest — perhaps 10,000–15,000 bodies across both variants and badging. The XPan is one of the most-coveted late-90s/early-2000s cameras.
The TX-1/XPan is the only interchangeable-lens panoramic 35mm camera ever produced. Other panoramic options use either fixed lenses (Hasselblad SWC for 6×6, Linhof Technorama for 6×17) or rotating cameras (Horizon, Noblex). The XPan delivers panoramic shooting in a 35mm rangefinder body that's just slightly larger than a Leica M.
For 2026 buyers, used TX-1/XPan prices have skyrocketed: $4,000–7,000 for clean bodies with the 45mm lens. The XPan II commands premium. The 30mm wide lens (rare) commands $2,000–4,000 alone. The camera's reputation as "the panoramic everyone wants" has driven prices to investment levels.
TX/XPan mount: 45mm f/4 (kit), 90mm f/4, 30mm f/5.6 (with external viewfinder, rare). Center filters reduce vignetting on the 30mm and 45mm in panoramic mode.
C41
Kodak Portra 160 is a professional C-41 color negative film with fine grain, soft contrast, and natural color.
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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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