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Recently I have acquired the adorable Fisheye Baby 110 and with it of course the Lomography Color Tiger 110 film. After a week my film was finished and full of enthusiasm I went and got it developed. I will now share with you the results!
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Have you ever been confused by these two cult cameras: the Holga and the Diana? Both are made of plastic and have plastic lenses, so they might produce pictures of the same quality like vignetting and soft focus. My curiosity made me purchase a Diana camera to experiment!
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Kodak may be at the point of bankruptcy, but that isn't stopping them from producing amazing emulsions. Kodak Pro Image 100 is certainly no exception
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I shot some 52 year old (!) film and got some decent results, but it took a bit of planning. Read about it.
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The Diana Mini is the only camera that reminds me my childhood camera (a Kodak Instamatic, still 100% working). Both have a square format and plastic lens. But the Diana Mini has some more controls and use the common 35mm film format instead of the abandoned 126. Walking in Como during the Christmas holidays, I made the first test of this camera. Here you can find my first impressions.
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Lomography Color X-Pro Sunset Strip 100 is not for the faint of heart. It's a crazy, wild, unpredictable film...and lots of fun.
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I was very curious to use the film Fujifilm 160S Pro. After shooting with a wonderful sun and a flash, I have an idea of how I will use next time.
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Although with a bit of patience, creativity and maybe with the aid of some good flashes you can safely use your Diana with any kind of film, the CN800 offers easily the most flexibility.
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A bargain-bin at a Blue Mountains junk shop leads to starred-out lights, long exposures, and shallow depth-of-field.
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The Sedic 110 Luxe had light leaks. The Sedic 110 Luxe is useful as a day time camera. The Sedic 110 Luxe needs special flash bulbs which would be difficult to find.
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What happens when you shoot a roll of what Kodak touts as the world's finest ISO 100 film with the Lomo camera that started it all?
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Working for Lomography has its privileges. So now and then you get the opportunity to test a demo version of a new product. I hate my job! A voila - a closer look at the Belair.
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The Olympus AF10 is an all automatic point and shoot camera, that takes care of a lot of thing to think about, and allows to concentrate of what you do best: shooting.
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When I retrieved my first little camera, a Kodak pocket B-1, I was curious whether the required 110 film cassettes would still be available. Luckily Lomography had just introduced its new 110 films, the black & white Orca and the color Tiger films! I decided to put a Tiger in my camera first.
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Just like his family, the Kodak Elitechrome EB is a very good x-pro color producer.
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Revolog films are special effects films that offer new possibilities for your analogue adventures
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We all love Black and White film, but with the resurgence of the digital age, less and lesser labs provide traditional black and white developing. But no need to worry, the Kodak BW400CN and the Ilford XP2 400 are here to save you from your miserable uhm... misery. For a price
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I reviewed the Zenit Horizon Perfekt and find it to be, well...perfekt.
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Pink is my favorite color, I always want to live the world with pink! Now Redscale XR50-200 made my dreams come true.
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When it's dark out, let Lomography Sunset Strip illuminate your night-time shots! With slightly subtle, yet incredibly present saturation and contrast, Sunset Strip is definitely the choice film for amazing evening shots!