Kodak's bottom-rung APS point-and-shoot — fixed-focus 24mm f/6.4 Ektanar, auto flash, one-button simplicity.
The Advantix F220 was one of the most basic cameras in Kodak's Advantix range for the Advanced Photo System, an early-2000s fixed-focus point-and-shoot that sat below the F300 and F350 in the F-series, built for buyers who wanted drop-in APS convenience with no decisions to make.
The specification is deliberately spare: a 24mm Kodak Ektanar lens with a fixed f/6.4 aperture, fixed focus, fully automatic exposure and an integrated auto flash in a light plastic body. Camera-wiki describes it as a basic, easy-to-use, fully automatic APS camera with one-button operation, plus the standard C, H and P print-format selection.
This was a handbag and glovebox camera, made for parties and family days out where a lost or dropped camera would not sting. The small fixed aperture keeps everything beyond a couple of metres acceptably sharp in good light, while indoor results lean entirely on the little flash and quality is firmly snapshot grade.
APS film has been discontinued since 2011, so usable stock is expired and processing needs a specialist lab; a large share of F220s sell as display or prop items. The camera depends on battery power to fire, so check it powers up and the flash charges, confirm the cartridge door opens and latches, and expect light cosmetic wear on the silver-grey plastic shell.