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My split cam and I have been on a long and arduous journey in the past but I think I have finally mastered this little plastic camera. And for several reasons that I will explain below I actually prefer it to the spiltzer attachment for other higher quality cameras.
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After seeing some of the amazing shots people were able to mash together using this lovely camera, I decided to buy myself one. I am on number 3 now and continue to get the same rubbish and faded results.
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If you want to get someone into the Lomography world, this is a good way to start - the camera is cheap, the image fusion results are very funny and the person will get to know the sometimes hard ways of analogue photography.
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It sounds too good to be true that a simple point and shoot sunny day film camera that can do the split and multiple exposure (MX)! Yes, Lomography Split Cam fits the bill to a T!
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I got this bad boy when the LSI first introduced it back in 2005, and sad to say that was the last time I used it. Enjoy the pictures and review.
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This camera is pure plastic- and that's what I like. You combine totally different things on one shot and still come out ok.
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When they call this image fusion, they aren't joking! The first thing I noticed upon developing a roll of film through the Split-Cam was that some of the "tricks" or images we were trying to create didn't quite line up how we thought they would. The second thing I noticed was that it didn't seem to matter; this camera is capable of funny, unique, and sometimes intense photo combinations even if things don't come out quite like you thought they would (don't forget about the 8th and 9th rules of Lomography!)
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First I did not know what to do with this yellow-black plastic cam, which I’ve got as a promotional gift when I subcribed to a photo-magazine.