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The DigitaLIZA 120 mm Scanning Mask is simply the easiest and most convenient way of scanning medium format film on your flatbed scanner. Whether it's from your Diana F+, Holga Wide Pinhole Camera, or a Mamiya TLR, the DigitaLIZA is what you need.
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If you want a versatile medium speed colour negative film, with subtle tones and accurate colour rendition, then Fuji Pro 400H is great.
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Eggzakly takes us into an in-depth analysis of one of the cheapest 120 films available in the market today: the Shanghai GP3!
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The Holga 120SF is my very first Lomographic camera (I bought it 2004) and I immediately felt in love with it, and thus, with the whole Lomographic spirit later on. Sure, Holga is well known by all lomographers, but what makes the Holga 120 SF so special?
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A faithful reproduction of the '60s iconic camera of the same name, the Diana+ retains the best features and offers an all-new functionality. Back in the 1960s, a plastic camera made waves in Hong Kong. It was called the Diana - a lightweight medium-format camera manufactured by the Great Wall Plastics factory. It was inexpensive and easy to use, and can produce dreamy, soft-focus images that lo-fi enthusiasts go crazy about. The Diana was such a big hit, inspiring rival companies to make copies and knock-offs of the iconic camera.
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The Shanghai Twin-Lens Reflex is the "grandfather" of the Seagull clan. This medium-format camera is China's version of the highly-acclaimed Rolleiflex series of TLR cameras.
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The Automat was the first Rolleiflex Twin Lens Reflex camera with an automatic film counter system, and a "Grand Prix" winner in the 1937 Paris World Fair.
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Light-leaks, vignetting, lo-fi appeal - these are some of the endearing qualities of the Holga 120, an inexpensive, medium-format plastic camera.