Konica Minolta's Konica Z-Up 60e — compact 35mm autofocus point-and-shoot with 35-62mm zoom and DX coding
The Z-Up 60e was a small autofocus zoom compact in Konica's long-running Z-Up series of 35mm point-and-shoots, sold late in the film era as an entry-level model with a short 35-62mm zoom. Like other Konica film cameras it is catalogued under Konica Minolta after the 2003 merger, though the body carries Konica branding.
It carries a 35-62mm autofocus zoom behind an electronic programmed shutter running from 1/2 to 1/500 second, metering from EV7 to EV16 at ISO 100. Film speed is set automatically from DX coding (ISO 100/200 and 400/800), and loading, advance and rewind are motorised. The built-in flash offers auto, fill and off modes plus red-eye reduction with a roughly 7-second recycle; framing is through a real-image zoom viewfinder with an AF indicator lamp, and a self-timer and night-portrait mode round out the features.
This is an easy carry-anywhere film compact for casual shooters: the short zoom keeps the body small, automation handles everything from loading to rewind, and focus works from 1m. The scene modes cover night portraits and close-ups, making it a low-effort choice for beginners returning to film photography.
Like most motorised film compacts it is wholly battery-dependent — nothing works without a healthy cell — so confirm it powers up, zooms, fires and rewinds before relying on it. Check that the flash charges, the AF indicator lights, the LCD frame counter displays fully, and the film-door latch and light seals are sound.