Product Description The fisheye view - the way lomographers live and see life. Imagine everything above, below, and around you streaming through your eyes and compacting into a nice and compact little ball. Think about your best friend's nose being vacuum-sucked into your lens, all the while their eyes and forehead are s-t-r-e-t-c-h-e-d back. Visualize yourself bowled over by the devastating colors that only fine glass can deliver. The world's first honest-to-God Fisheye camera is here and waiting to swim into your life. Open your heart, stretch out your hands, and grease up your fins.
Broke on second roll of filmMarch 14, 2010 Flannery 626(Orange County, California) The rewind mechanism broke on the second roll of film, rendering the camera useless, and I lost a roll of film in the process of figuring out what was wrong.
Fun!January 26, 2010 E. Cavazos(Monterrey, MX) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is a camera to have fun. I'm waiting to finish the film, so i can see my pictures.
Buy this!!!!December 15, 2009 Polly(Gainesville) This is such a fun camera and I was so happy with the first roll of film I developed. I'll be honest, you have to experiment with the camera in order to get the optimal fisheye shot. It's obviously not as fantastic as a real fisheye lense on a (D)SLR but for $30, it beats having to buy a $800 camera and a $300+ lens. The majority of my college campus is built of bricks so pictures on campus are amazing. I love this camera!
Cool picturesJune 7, 2009 Daniel C. Jennings 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Nice camera for fun snapshots... give a great fisheye effect. It's much cheaper than an actual fisheye lens for a digital camera, but about the same image quality as a disposable camera, so don't expect the sharp images that you'd get with a real nice camera. Maximum fisheye effect occurs real close to the subject (within a foot or so... but not too close as the subject will then become blurry), but you still can get a nice effect if you take pictures from further away (although if you get too far the object will become tiny or even invisible).
Be prepared to buy a lot of film and spend money getting them developed though (especially when you're first getting started and want to take some test pictures, as it's mostly luck how good the pictures turn out). I can say that they do improve with experience. You really do need to get used to the flash... it must be used while you are indoors, but it's a little bright so it might make the subject look blown-out. Best thing to do would be to cover the flash with something (like a napkin) to lessen its strength, or just to only use this camera outside on bright, sunny days.
A warning though, this camera is made of plastic... and after several uses, the knob to wind up the film (when you run out of exposures and want to remove the film from the camera) broke off on mine. The camera is still usable... but it's a pain taking the film out now.
One last thing I like about this product... you can buy the Lomography Fisheye Submarine Case (Clear/Red) to use this camera underwater, in which you can get some great shots.
This camera has PLASTIC lens but not Optical GLASS!April 22, 2009 Ming(San Jose, CA United States) 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
Out of curiosity I bought one of this camera which said that it has a 170 degree Optical-Glass Lens but it actually has a PLASTIC lens. I hope someone from Amazon will change the Technical Detail and Specification of the AD. This lens can be easily scratched so be very careful. In fact mine camera came with a clear scratch on the side of the front element. I felt that a $40 for this plastic camera is a bit expensive. The only big merit to this toy is its 170 degree lens and the kind of images you can take will cost you a few hundreds dollar more usually for a real optical Glass lens.