( ), or , is a
Japan ese company known for its
Photographic Film and
Camera s. Fuji operates over 220 subsidiary companies for research, manufacture and distribution of products with manufacturing facilities in Asia, Europe, and North America. They also produce computer media storage consumables, such as
CD-R s and
Zip Disk s. The camera film comes in distinctive green boxes and sometimes gets rebranded into own-label film. One example of this is
President's Choice . Fuji products are distinct in their uniform containers. Fuji photographic films are considered along with, and often compete against those produced by
Kodak . Their products are sold in over 200 countries worldwide. Since 1982 Fuji is one of the main sponsors of the
FIFA World Cup
- Velvia slide film - considered among the better slide films by many photographers for nature and landscape photography.
- NPZ negative film - high speed (ASA 800) film used primarily by photojournalists
- C41 negative film - includes a fourth colour layer of green not seen in other film
- Fujicolor Superia - As of 2005 , their most widely available film, intended for snapshots
- The FinePix series of Digital Camera s
- --- Many of them use Fujifilm's revolutionary Super CCD sensors which mix large photo diodes with very small ones to improve the dynamic range and reduce picture noise and/or increase resolution (using also some interpolation)
- Fujinon lenses - including the most widely used Television lenses in the world.
- Photographic printing paper
- Inkjet printing paper
- Digital Media, such as DVDs and CDs
- X-ray film
- Base material for LCD displays
- Fujica film cameras.
- Motion picture film stock, known for its smooth grain and vibrant color rendition. Most Steven Spielberg films are shot on Fuji stock.
- Minilab equipments, announced in 2006 a global alliance with Noritsu Kokoi together holding a market share of more than 80% of the global market.
Fujifilm holds a 75% stake in
Fuji Xerox , a joint venture between itself and
Xerox Corporation of America.