Fujifilm's focus-free 35mm compact of 1991 — fixed 35mm f/8 lens, 1/100s shutter, drop-in loading, two AA cells.
The DL-8 was one of the simplest cameras in Fuji's DL series of 35mm compacts, launched in 1991 when the range ran from focus-free snapshooters up to autofocus zoom models. DL stood for drop-in loading, Fuji's simplified film-loading system, and the DL-8 sat at the entry point of the line, sold under the Fuji brand in the years before the company standardised on Fujifilm.
Specification is minimal: a fixed-focus 35mm f/8 three-element lens covering roughly 1.2m to infinity, a single 1/100s shutter speed and a reverse Galilean viewfinder with an underexposure warning lamp beside the eyepiece. The body measures 125x72x50mm and runs on two AA batteries. With a fixed aperture and one shutter speed, exposure depends entirely on the latitude of colour negative film.
This is a camera for casual daylight snapshots. The focus-free operation and lack of settings make it genuinely point-and-shoot, and it suits beginners or shooters who want a pocketable, zero-decision film camera for sunny conditions. The slow f/8 lens rules out indoor or low-light work, and results reward forgiving, higher-speed negative film.
Used examples are cheap and plentiful. Check the film door and its seals, confirm the frame counter and film advance operate, and load fresh AA cells to verify the electronics and warning lamp respond. There is little else to fail, but because everything passes through a small fixed lens, haze or dirt on the front element noticeably softens results - inspect the glass before buying.