* Item pictured for illustrative purposes only, actual item not pictured. See ‘Notes’ next to grade for included items.
Olympus Infinity Stylus Epic DLX All Weather, Panorama, Quartz Date 35mm Camera, Champagne with 35mm f/2.8 Lens
We're sorry - this item is temporarily unavailable.
Want to be notified when it comes back in stock? Add it to your wishlist and we'll email you as soon it's available.
Consider one of the options below or call us at 1-800-342-5534 to speak with our KEH Gear Experts about a perfect alternative.
Olympus Stylus Epic DLX: the pocketable 35mm all-weather workhorse.
The Stylus Epic DLX earns its reputation on two specs alone: a 35mm f/2.8 lens and genuine all-weather sealing. That f/2.8 aperture is fast enough to shoot in cafes, bars, and overcast afternoons without flash, the kind of light that kills lesser point-and-shoots. The fixed focal length forces compositional discipline and keeps the optical formula simple, which is why this lens produces results that embarrass cameras with far more complicated zoom systems.
The all-weather body means rain, beach sand, and ski slopes don't require a second thought. This isn't splash resistance as a marketing footnote, it's a sealed chassis designed to go where you'd hesitate to bring anything else. The champagne-finish DLX variant adds a quartz date imprint and panorama mode to the standard Epic formula, giving photographers a built-in archival tool and a crop option for wide compositions on 35mm film.
For a fixed-lens compact, the Epic DLX asks very little and delivers a great deal. The 35mm f/2.8 lens on a point-and-shoot body is a combination that photographers have trusted for decades, and the film market's renewed energy has only reinforced how well this camera holds up.
Who It's For
Street photographers who shoot in unpredictable conditions get a sealed body they can pocket without hesitation. Documentary and travel shooters benefit from the 35mm focal length's natural field of view and the f/2.8 aperture's low-light capability in situations where a camera bag isn't practical. Film photographers returning to analog who want reliable automation paired with a sharp prime will find the Epic DLX removes every technical obstacle between them and the frame. Anyone building a dated archive of 35mm work gets the quartz date function built right in.
Key Features
- 35mm f/2.8 fixed lens for fast handheld shooting in low light
- All-weather sealed body for rain, salt spray, and sand exposure
- Champagne finish with quartz date imprint on film frames
- Panorama mode for wide-format compositions on standard 35mm film
- Compact pocketable design with point-and-shoot autofocus and programmed metering
- Automatic DX film speed detection for ISO 100-800+ cartridges
FAQ
- What makes the 35mm f/2.8 lens on the Epic DLX actually useful for everyday shooting?
- An f/2.8 aperture on a 35mm focal length lets you shoot handheld in dim indoor light and overcast conditions without flash - the fixed length also means the optical design is optimized for sharpness and contrast across the frame, without the compromises built into zoom compacts.
- Is the all-weather sealing actually reliable, or marketing?
- It's a sealed chassis designed for genuine environmental exposure. Rain, salt spray, and sand won't kill it - this is the camera you bring to the beach or ski trip when other point-and-shoots stay home.
- What's the difference between the DLX and the standard Stylus Epic?
- The DLX adds a quartz date imprint function and panorama mode. The date stamp archives exposure metadata directly on the film frame; panorama mode crops the negative to a wider aspect ratio for landscape compositions.
- Do I need to worry about the fixed 35mm focal length limiting composition?
- Fixed focal lengths force you to move your feet instead of zooming, which develops your eye faster. 35mm is wide enough for environmental portraits and street work, tight enough to isolate subjects - most film photographers never outgrow it.
- What kind of film should I load?
- Any 35mm film cartridge works. ISO 100-400 color negative film is the safe default; faster stocks (800+) handle low light but need bright sun or flash; slide film rewards consistent metering. The camera has automatic film speed detection via DX coding.
- Can you manually focus or adjust exposure on this camera?
- The Epic DLX is fully automatic - autofocus and programmed exposure. There's no manual focus override or exposure compensation dial. If you need control, this isn't the camera; if you want to shoot and not think about settings, this is exactly right.
| Specification | Value |
|---|---|
| Resolution | None |
This description was generated using AI based on KEH's internal product standards, product expertise, and knowing what customers care about most. While we strive for accuracy, details may vary by individual item.
| Brand Name | Olympus |
|---|---|
| Film Type | 35mm roll |
| Lens Type | Wide-Angle |
| Max Focal Length | 35mm |
| Min Focal Length | 35mm |