
Fujifilm
Fujifilm BHBUSWA1088 Instax Mini 9 Lime Green Camera Bundle
★★★★★
Lime green and instant — the Instax Mini 9 puts credit-card prints in your hand before the moment is even over.
$79.95*
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*Price sourced from Amazon.com. Last updated:Jun 19, 2026.Price and availability are subject to change.
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Overview
Specifications
Film Format
Instax Mini (86mm × 54mm print, 62mm × 46mm image area)
Lens
60mm f/12.7
Minimum Focus Distance
~60cm standard; ~35cm with close-up lens attachment
Exposure Control
Automatic with 5-position brightness dial
Flash
Built-in (auto)
Special Modes
Hi-Key (intentional overexposure)
Color
Lime Green
Included
Close-up lens attachment, selfie mirror, Instax Mini film twin pack (20 exposures)
Pros & Cons
👍 Pros
- Prints develop in hand within 90 seconds — no app, no screen, no waiting for a digital file to process or transfer
- Close-up lens attachment expands the usable focusing range to approximately 35cm, making arm's-length selfies reliably sharp
- Five-setting brightness dial gives enough exposure latitude to handle indoor and outdoor light without flash adjustments
- Selfie mirror on the front panel provides optical framing aid for self-portraits without requiring a screen
- Instax Mini film is widely available worldwide, ensuring easy film resupply without ordering from specialty retailers
👎 Cons
- No digital preview or screen of any kind — misprints caused by framing error cost a full sheet of film with no recovery option
- Automatic exposure system handles mixed or challenging lighting poorly — high-contrast scenes and backlit subjects frequently result in underexposed prints
- Each print consumes one sheet of proprietary Instax Mini film, making the per-shot cost significantly higher than digital alternatives
- Image area is small (62mm × 46mm) and analog resolution is limited — fine detail, text, and distant subjects render soft
- No way to reprint, duplicate, or digitize a print natively — physical print is the only output
Frequently Asked Questions
How sharp are the prints from the Instax Mini 9, and what are the physical dimensions?
Instax Mini prints measure 86mm × 54mm (roughly credit-card size) with an image area of approximately 62mm × 46mm. Sharpness is adequate for the format — these are analog instant prints, not digital files, so fine detail doesn't resolve the way a digital photo does. The charm is in the tactile, physical print; the image quality is warm and slightly soft, which suits the social and casual shooting context this camera is built for.
The camera has a "selfie mirror" — how does that actually work on this model?
A small convex mirror is positioned next to the lens on the front of the camera body. It functions as a framing aid when shooting self-portraits — you hold the camera at arm's length facing yourself, look at the mirror, and use it to center your face in the frame before pressing the shutter. It does not provide a digital preview; it's an optical aid only.
What does the close-up lens attachment included in this bundle do?
The close-up lens (also called a selfie lens attachment) clips over the standard lens and shortens the minimum focusing distance from approximately 60cm to around 35cm. Without it, subjects closer than 60cm will appear out of focus in the print. The attachment is specifically useful for arm's-length selfies and tight tabletop shots — it's not a macro lens, but it meaningfully extends the usable shooting range for near subjects.
How many shots does the included Instax Mini film pack provide?
The bundle includes one Instax Mini Instant Daylight Film Twin Pack providing 20 exposures total (2 packs of 10). Each sheet produces one print. Film is a recurring consumable cost — Instax Mini film is widely available and typically sold in 10- or 20-exposure packs.
Does the Instax Mini 9 have any manual exposure controls?
Minimal. The camera has an automatic exposure system with a brightness adjustment dial offering five settings (from Indoors/Hi-Key to Sunny Outdoors). There is no manual shutter speed, aperture, or ISO control. The Hi-Key mode intentionally overexposes slightly for a bright, airy aesthetic. For creative control over exposure, this camera is not the right tool — it's designed for point-and-shoot simplicity.