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I've bought too many cheap, often not working, cameras, but sometimes, they provide quite a lot of fun as I go about trying them out with film.
These are all cameras that would not be thought of as being any good, even in their own time, more consumer snapshot cameras.
I thought that I would describe each of them as I get through testing them.
(Some of the images may have been posted by me in the past).
AGFA ISO RAPID C.
Has a novel film transfer feature that uses 35mm film pushed into a cassette and taken up in another cassette.
Only control shows as a "sunny" icon and a black cloudy icon which seems to enable the battery contact to the flash bulb (and I read; changes the shutter speed from 1/80 to 1/40).
Makes square images at 24x24 on a length of film around 24" long, limited to 16 exposures by the mechanics of the camera (locks up as the frame countdown indicator shows 0 or the film finishes).
Fairly easy to stuff a length of 35mm film directly from a 135 cassette (pre-curled) into the cassette in a changing bag. Good for home developing.

Usually quite cheap and so simple, will probably work. The square format is very nice for a change.
Gives distorted and soft images, quite Lomo really.... Here is one of my fave test scenes on Fomapan200 (uncropped).

I like this and will get around to running a few films through it. Of several exposures on the test film, this is by far the sharpest image (centre).
These are all cameras that would not be thought of as being any good, even in their own time, more consumer snapshot cameras.
I thought that I would describe each of them as I get through testing them.
(Some of the images may have been posted by me in the past).
AGFA ISO RAPID C.
Has a novel film transfer feature that uses 35mm film pushed into a cassette and taken up in another cassette.
Only control shows as a "sunny" icon and a black cloudy icon which seems to enable the battery contact to the flash bulb (and I read; changes the shutter speed from 1/80 to 1/40).
Makes square images at 24x24 on a length of film around 24" long, limited to 16 exposures by the mechanics of the camera (locks up as the frame countdown indicator shows 0 or the film finishes).
Fairly easy to stuff a length of 35mm film directly from a 135 cassette (pre-curled) into the cassette in a changing bag. Good for home developing.

Usually quite cheap and so simple, will probably work. The square format is very nice for a change.
Gives distorted and soft images, quite Lomo really.... Here is one of my fave test scenes on Fomapan200 (uncropped).

I like this and will get around to running a few films through it. Of several exposures on the test film, this is by far the sharpest image (centre).
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