Lo-fi photos and simulated film grain ~ more from the Kodak Charmera

In my continued quest to find beauty in the photos made by toy cameras, I’ve come to broaden my views on what makes for an interesting photo. Growing up with cheap 35mm film cameras, disposable plastic boxes from Kodak and Fujifilm, 110 cameras, and APS cameras, I was never much about technical perfection anyway. Chasing megapixels is a fool’s adventure powered by marketing departments. One of my favourite film cameras was actually a Fujifilm APS camera – low on image quality, but high on ease of use and fun.

Bricks and concrete in the morning sun – Kodak Chamera with added film grain

It must have been truly magical to see images appear on film plates more than a century ago. Now, image recording is a daily routine ~ surveillance cameras all around, smartphones, digital keychain cameras that fit in pockets, AI that can generate talking flying pig animations, social media platforms saturated by snaps of the junk of day-to-day life, the latest and greatest from Sony. Image-making is so commonplace, we hardly notice the magic of being able to freeze time inside a frame.

Shadow ladder – with film grain added in Exposure X7

Of course, a good photo is about more than technical perfection and the money spent on gear ~ light and shadow, shape and angle, an interesting subject, framing and composition, emotion and vibe, story-telling ~ all of these elements can be communicated through even the cheapest of cameras.

A faded view through reflections

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