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Fuji T64 is a slide film for the professionals. But it doesn’t mean that you can’t use it! Do it!
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Rule #1: Take your camera everywhere.
With Lomolitos, you've run out of excuses.
I found a handful of Lomolitos on sale at an Urban Outfitters store last winter, so I picked up a few: red, yellow, and green. My lovely wife raised her eyebrows when she saw them, but when it comes to cameras, she doesn't try to reason with me anymore...
There are two things about these little gems that make them so totally awesome.
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So what's all the fuss about you ask? This little beauty (yes there's no other way to describe this camera) is something to cry about, or at least shout about! Just walking down the street with one is enough for you to get celebrity status (not that's what we're after).
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Loading a Kodak Ektachrome EPP in my LCA+ while I was still new in the Lomo world...
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"Lucky Super new 200 Color Film can reproduce clear details of the objects and their texture with sharp color" - this is what its says on the box of this film and i must say it is all true.
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The Holga 120 CFN camera is – as its name suggests – a medium format camera which uses 120 film. It has a built in colour flash which means that you can take pictures in the colours yellow, blue and red but also natural coloured ones. Because of the flash you need two AA batteries.
The first Holga camera was built in 1982 in China.
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Wow! How surprised I was finding this kind 35mm film in a store. Of course it was already expired for almost a year, but who cares...
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Nice contrast and grain, definitely one of my new favorites!
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Grain your Shots! Classy, lovely, and nostalgic. Talk about those wonderful ideas of giving grains in your shots!
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Instant photography fans mourned over the loss of Polaroid. Luckily, Fuji saved the day with their Fuji 'Cheki' line of instant cameras. The Cheki 55i is the most sophisticated of the 'Cheki' family with its' unique features.
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If the Diana+ is the faithful reproduction of the 1960s Diana, then the Diana F+ is the improved version of the Diana+ - equipped with the talent to 'flash.'
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Be blown off by the crazy saturation of this Kodak slide when xpro-ed! My new favourite slide to cross process is the Kodak Ektachrome EPR 64!
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One of the most promising little bits of news over the past year that proves analogue photography is alive and well is the announcement by Kodak of a brand new 35mm color film coming out this year.
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One of the most promising little bits of news over the past year that proves analogue photography is alive and well (besides the excitement and passion we see here every day) is the announcement by Kodak of a brand new 35mm color film coming out this year.
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A limited edition film produced by Tokyo Gratzy.
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One month ago I was surfing on the internet looking for new cameras and searching information about camera history, and my eyes were caught by a really nice camera: the Cosina AF-35 "Visitronic". The brand Cosina made me immediately think to the history of LCA (as the Cosina CX2 inspirated the conception of the legendary Lomo Compact Automat...) and attracted me of course. But I was also very interested in the "autofocus" system from a late 70's (apparently 1977-78) camera called "Visitronic".
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It rocks: The Rollei Retro is the real successor of the legendary Agfa APX. Black and white photographers will love it for its fine grain and the perfect copies of life
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The world's first compact 35mm camera with a fisheye lens, a whole 170 degrees lens that takes in as much as possible, and with a built in flash the possibilities of this camera is endless. Use it when you are just out and about, at parties, day or night and with it being extremely light its easy to carry around with you.
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six pluses and one minus = five stars. LCA plus has, as her name suggests, some plus features. But let’s start with the basics:
It is the same light weighing camera (even more light), same sizes. The distance goes from 0,8 meters up to infinity. The lens is still minitar 32mm, but made in china (you can see it is a bit red when the russian lens is bluish). The aperture is fix at 2,8. You have a hotshoe.
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The Agfa Clack was introduced in 1954 and built until 1965 by Agfa in Germany. The camera uses 120mm medium format film and creates pictures that are 6 to 9cm wide (so not the usual square pictures but landscape!). You get 8 pictures on one roll of medium format film, and those negs are HUGE!