Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Sprocket Rocket @ RM350


Lomography’s latest camera is a bite-sized guy (5″ across) with a panoramic lens and, of course, manual film advance. It’s called the Sprocket Rocket, and it’s about as simple as cameras get these days. The lens is extra-wide-angle to capture extra-full-bleed on the film (i.e. you can print the sprocket holes and numbering), and there are two knobs, for forward and backward film scrolling. The result is the usual ridiculous Lomo-style pictures with their weird focus and crazy colors. If you’ve used a Lomo before, you know what you’re getting into. Its exposure options are limited to 1/100th and bulb, and the aperture numbers are too sad to even relate, but they should be suitable for outdoor photography.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Fisheye 2 - RM305


  • Size: 4.25" (10.5cm) x 2.5" (6cm) x 2.5" (6cm)
  • Weight: 0.5lb (0.23kg)
  • Format: all 35mm (color negative, slide, b&w)
  • Field of Vision: 170 degrees
  • Approximate focal length: 10mm
  • Fixed aperture: f/8
  • Shutter speeds: 1/100, “B“
  • Flashes: Standard hotshoe & built-in flash (powered by one “AA“ battery)
  • Multiple Exposure switch for unlimited shots on 1 frame
  • Film can be processed at any 35mm lab, supermarket, drug store, swapmeet, etc.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Mycro IIIa - Not for sale. heeeeeeee


The history of the little Mycro dates back to before WW2 when the first model was introduced in 1939. This IIIA version was amongst the last made and one of the more commonly found models. As a camera it's very restricted in abilities and has to be regarded more as a novelty camera than anything else. However the cute appeal earned them a substantial following and they were sold in their thousands, making a useful contribution to the Japanese postwar economy. Technically this camera was made by Sanwa, but as its marked as Mycro Camera Co, this is how it's listed here. This diminutive camera takes14 x 14mm negatives on 17mm paper backed roll film, frame counting being via the time honoured red window in the rear hatch. If you are viewing this window over the full width of a 15" screen, the picture will be two and a quarter times bigger than the camera! Surprisingly it takes reasonable pictures.


Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Spinner 360-RM565


Take the Spinner 360° in one hand, pull the cord with the other and release it – in a split second the camera spins 360° around its own axis and records everything that’s around you on a frame more than 4 times longer than a conventional landscape picture.


Inspired by a futuristic concept from the 1980s, the Lomography Spinner 360° takes panorama photography to an all new snapshot level. Shoot from the hip, do the rollercoaster, the backflip, toothbreaker, timescan or manual long time exposures. There’s practically no limit to the experimentation offered by this camera! Every bit of your 35mm film is fully exposed and results in the sprocket-hole look unique to analogue photography.

Features:

Uses standard 35mm film that can be processed anywhere
Creates up to 8 full 360° panoramas on a 36-exposure film
Rubber band drive + fully manual controls (no batteries required)
Manual long exposures
Sunny/cloudy aperture settings
Tripod mount

Monday, October 4, 2010

Olympus Pen EE-RM599 (SOLD!)







With the Olympus Pen EE, the emphasis was on efficiency. Features included fixed focus, a shutter speed of 1/60 sec., and automatic exposure adjustment. Anyone could take beautiful photographs simply by pushing the button.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Golden Half-RM180

Package includes:

1. One(1) golden half camera
2. One(1) lens cap
3. One(1) camera strap
4. One(1) roll of film
5. English / Japanese manual

Features:
- Half frame, double your shots! 36 exposure film = 72 pictures!!!
- Shoot two pictures side by side (check out the pictures!)
- Variable aperture settings!
- Flash hotshoe (to attach flash!)
- Small, lightweight and easy to use.
- Uses 35mm film (normal film)

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

HOLGA 120


The Holga 120 is a medium format camera for 120 mm films. The picture format is 6x4.5 cm or 6x6 cm.The Holga is a charming, lightweight camera that excites the professionals.Discover the Holga's unique talent for dreamy, beautiful double exposure shots.Marvel as your Holga transforms ordinary photographs into extraordinary low-tech works of art. A classic !
The Holga Starter Kit contents all you need for a successful start with the Holga 120: The new Holga 120 CFN is a medium format camera with integrated color flash and a plastic lens, very nice photo book by Lebain and adhesive tape to prevent light leaks.