Are you looking for a quick, budget-friendly DIY to keep your little one engaged for hours? This easy DIY toy camera will tick all your boxes. You can make this cute toy camera for your kid’s pretend ...
Kids love cameras, probably because of the combination of them being expensive, covered in buttons and something that grown-ups are always pointing at them. The VTech Kidizoom gives children the ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Pop Camera is an app that turns your camera into an old-school toy camera without the clunkiness of buying said ...
Airou Toy Digital Camera, manufactured in China for Capcom (all images courtesy Prestel) The colorful history of toy cameras, those affordable film cameras in plastic boxes, is being celebrated in a ...
Peter, the founder of ePHOTOzine, has a look at the NeinGrenze 5000T: Branded as the "Amazing Miniature Effect Camera" the 5000T is quite an odd ball. Unlike many compacts that may have a miniature ...
The Camp Snap is a simple fixed-focus digital camera with only an optical viewfinder and a shot counter, which has become a surprise hit among photography enthusiasts for its similarity to a ...
World Toy Camera Day is celebrated annually around the world on the third Sunday of October, this year the day falls on October 16. There has been a growing interest in the kind of effects that a toy ...
The hashtag #filmisnotdead has over 1 million posts on Instagram, but #film leads the analog-love graduatory with 11.5 million posts, followed by #35mm – the most popular photographic film – with 2 ...
A rudimentary plastic camera made in China in the 1980s became an iconic item – even influencing a certain photography app you probably have on your phone. It looks like a scene from a Southern Gothic ...
Sometime in the 1960s, a small manufacturer in Hong Kong released a cheap plastic camera called the Diana. In the US, you could buy one for a dollar. The photos it made were not remarkable—they had a ...
Want to surprise yourself? Try putting a crappy, plastic lens onto your high-end digital camera. We call these artistically ironic adapters "toy lenses," and the hard-to-control analog results are ...
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