Nikon/Nikon Tele-Touch
Nikon Tele-Touch

Nikon Tele-Touch

Nikon · Japan · 1990 · 135 film

The Nikon Tele-Touch represents a typical entry-level compact camera from Nikon in 1990, part of the wave of autofocus 35mm point-and-shoot models popular during that era. Designed for casual photography, it offered straightforward operation likely featuring a fixed or limited zoom lens, auto-exposure, and simple focus control. While Nikon had already established significant innovations with professional SLRs, the Tele-Touch served the mass market, providing reliable, user-friendly picture-taking without advanced features. Its design reflected the practical, utilitarian aesthetic common to consumer compacts of the early 1990s, emphasizing ease of use and affordability over technical sophistication.

As a standard compact from a major manufacturer, the Tele-Touch holds little specific historical significance beyond being a product of its time and brand. It exemplifies the ubiquitous "snapshot" camera that enabled widespread film photography before the digital revolution. While functional for its intended purpose, it did not introduce groundbreaking technology or achieve lasting fame, remaining a representative example of everyday photographic technology rather than a milestone in camera design.

Specifications

Film Format135

Pricing

Market Value
~$35

Editorial Ratings

Build Quality
2.5
Value
2.0
Collectibility
1.5
Historical Significance
1.0

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