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 profileMedium Format Rangefinder
The Mamiya 7 II (1999) is the refined successor to the 1995 Mamiya 7. Same body, same lens mount, same 4-stop shutter range, same six-lens system. Improvements: brighter rangefinder finder with better-illuminated frame lines, dedicated multi-exposure switch, **35mm panoramic adapter** (a film-loading insert that masks the negative to a 24×65 mm wide format using standard 35mm film), and slight cosmetic updates.
Reference
Recommended film stocks for the — 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 profileC41
Kodak Portra 160 is a professional C-41 color negative film with fine grain, soft contrast, and natural color.
View profileC41
Kodak Ektar 100 is a fine-grain C-41 color negative film with saturated color and high sharpness.
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Before you buy used
About this camera
The Mamiya 7 with a brighter finder, multi-exposure, and a 35mm panoramic mask. The last great medium-format rangefinder.
| Field | Value |
|---|
| Format | 120 / 220, 6×7 cm; 35mm panoramic with adapter (24×65 mm) |
| Mount | Mamiya 7 (bayonet) |
| Years | 1999–2014 |
| Shutter | 4s – 1/500s, Seiko leaf, in each lens |
| Flash sync | All speeds |
| Meter | Center-weighted silicon, AE-coupled |
| Modes | Aperture priority, manual, multi-exposure |
| Weight | 920 g (with 80mm) |
| Battery | 1× 6V (required) |
Released 1999, production ended with Mamiya's 2014 film exit. Same lens compatibility as the original Mamiya 7: 43mm, 50mm, 65mm, 80mm, 150mm, 210mm. The panoramic 35mm adapter became one of the most-cited Mamiya 7 II features — landscape photographers used it for 65 mm-wide letterbox negatives that scan into very wide print formats.
For landscape film shooters in the 2000s and 2010s, a Mamiya 7 II + 43mm + 80mm + 150mm was the standard kit: light enough to hike with all three lenses, leaf-shutter quiet enough for street use, and sharp enough that prints to 30+ inches showed no compromise. The 35mm panoramic adapter further extended its utility — same camera, two formats.
Used prices rose sharply 2018–2024 as the 1990s/2000s film revival made the Mamiya 7 line scarce. A clean 7 II body with three lenses approaches $7,000 in 2026.
Same as Mamiya 7. The 43/4.5 L is most-praised; 80/4 L kit; 150/4.5 L portrait/landscape. External finders for 43, 50, 210mm. Polarizer adapter, lens hoods. Mamiya 7 35mm panoramic adapter (35mm cassette + frame mask, replaceable from 120 to 35mm in seconds).
E6
Fujifilm Fujichrome Provia 100F (RDPIII) is a professional E6 reversal (slide) film in 135 and 120 formats, known for its natural, balanced color reproduction, very fine grain, and moderate saturation. It remains in production as of 2026 and is one of the last professional slide films available.
View profileBW
Kodak Tri-X 400 is a classic black-and-white film known for strong tonality, visible grain, and documentary character.
View profileMamiya 7 II
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