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coldkennels

38 items sold
2 followers

About

Location: United KingdomMember since: 28 February 2010

All Feedback (322)

y***i (239)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
Verified purchase
Superb item, as described, good price, fast posting, good comms, highly recommended seller, many thanks.
r***8 (41)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
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Well described, good communication and fast delivery. Thanks.
p***k (702)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
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Lovely item in excellent condition, well packed, fast delivery, highly recommended seller.
h***a (142)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
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Exactly as described, fast delivery
lanasone (7612)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
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Mega fast payment, A1+++++ Ebayer
rhl-shop (27967)- Feedback left by buyer.
Past 6 months
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Quick response and fast payment. Perfect! THANKS!!
Reviews (2)
Fomapan 400 35 Exposure B&W 35mm Film x 5
09 May 2024
I love Fomapan 400 - really great traditional-looking black and white film at a much lower price than a lot of the alternatives.
I love Fomapan 400 - really great traditional-looking black and white film at a much lower price than a lot of the alternatives.
06 April 2010
Junky, but with a lo-fi charm.
Lomography - both the pseudo-art-form and the company whose brand name the practice shares - is a polarizing thing. Its detractors say it's a pretentious activity for hipsters, using overpriced junk sold by a money-grabbing evil empire that sell things purely on branding alone. Its followers claim it has charm, warmth, and a sense of community and fun. Me? I fall into the latter camp, but I can definitely see the argument presented against it. In a non-biased sense, not favouring either side, a lot of Lomography's cameras are made entirely of plastic, but are ingeniously designed. There are a whole load of add-ons made, which while expensive for what they are, are always a lot cheaper than the "proper" versions used by "proper" photographers. And the results? Well, they speak for themselves. They do often have that old-school warmth and dreamy haze, and can (depending on what you do) have some buck-wild colours that can look stunning. The Diana F+ is a prime example of all of the above. It's relatively lightweight plastic, and probably wouldn't take to being dropped too well. And as its viewfinder doesn't look through the lens, the only focusing option available is a basic zone focusing ring. And forget about the light metering and countless aperture/shutter speed settings on your expensive SLR: Here you have two speeds (N, which is about 1/60, and B) and four apertures (handily shown, for the beginner, as cloud, part cloud, sun and pinhole - F/11, F/16, F/22 and F/150 respectively). And if you don't like the basic lens, or don't like using 120, or if you prefer instant photography, there are add-ons available to change all of that. The 35mm back, for example, is very popular. So what you have, ultimately, is a camera that while easy to pick up - unlike SLRs, you're unlikely, as a complete novice, to get overwhelmed with options) - is pretty tough to master. You can spend years just taking basic snapshots and getting decent results, but if you want to teach yourself how photography works, this is a good way to learn principles like metering by eye, Sunny 16 rules, etc., and eventually, you can get some amazing photographs worthy of hanging on a wall somewhere. Whether or not you want to buy this, however, depends on how patient and tolerant you are. Yes, you will get a lot of underexposed shots at first. And yes, nothing will be perfectly sharp and in focus. But that's part of the charm, and part of the learning curve. And for the £45 it costs on average (or £80 with flash), you'll have a lot of fun with it. Carry it everywhere; it'll become your new best friend.
2 of 2 found this helpful