Glad it was helpful! would love to hear how that went when you finish your film roll. Thanks for watching and taking the time to leave a comment as well! I appreciate it 🙌🏼✨
32mm full frame, but since this is a plastic lens it's set to F10, so no shadow depth of field there. Hope that helps! Thanks for watching and for leaving a comment as well, Cheers 🙌🏼✨
I bought this one and took it to my auntie to take her photos. I always take an analogue photo of her but my Pentax broke, so this was my idea^^ As this camera is very light, my auntie was able to pick it and take a photo of me. I have 6 photos left, today is my friends bday and I am gonna use the camera. Thanks for the review! I really like the photo with the car and Sun!:)
Thanks for sharing! I'm glad you were able to enjoy using the camera and the photography process. Hope the video was useful, and thanks for watching! 😁🙌🏼
Awesome! Thank you, Hanna! I appreciate the kind words and welcome to this small community 😁 We all need a little push sometimes to do the thing that we clearly want do to but can't be bothered 😂 Would love to hear about your experience with the camera after you get your photos developed! Once again thanks a lot for watching and taking the time to leave a comment as good luck with the photography session! 😁🙌🏼
Glad it was helpful! Looking forward to do more film/disposable cameras videos later! Thanks for watching and for dropping a comment as well! Cheers 🙌🏼✨
Hi Ana, you would have to develop the photos in a photo lab first. They offer services like scanning your film roll for digital files. That way they give you the actual film roll plus digital files stored on a usb drive or cloud service. Thanks for watching and leaving a comment as well! I appreciate it! 🙏🏼😁
Also what does the number besides the shutter indicate? Is it the number of films left or number or shot u already took? Like which should I start in the first place/ rewind? Should it be 1 or 27?
Hi Jasmine, 1- Yes you need to manually advance the film after every shot you take. 2- The shutter count indicates how many exposures you have left. This particular camera comes with 27 exposures, brand new it will indicate the number 27, and will continue to count in reverse until you take the last shot (number 1) after that, you have to manually rewind it one more time until it reaches 0. When it reaches zero, it means it's safe to remove the film roll from the actual camera. I uploaded another video showing how to remove the film roll from the camera, in case you want to reuse/keep the camera. I hope this was helpful. Thank you for watching and taking the time to leave a comment as well! Cheers! 🙌🏼📸
Hi Dulce, the shutter count works as a countdown. It starts at 27, and gradually goes down to 1. If your camera says 24, means that you either took 3 photos, or the shot counter is not 100% accurate and showing in between 24 and 25. So it should be okay, For the time being seems like it's working as intended. Hope that helps, and let me know if you have any other questions! Thanks for watching and leaving a comment as well, and good luck with your photos! 🙌🏼✨
first time using one of these in a couple of days for graduation, half indoor, half outdoor event, should I not use the flash? I checked the comments and what I gathered basically was use the flash only in really dark areas, or am I completely off base there lol
Correct, the flash is mainly for night photography or really dark indoor areas, for outdoor bright shooting or even cloud days the flash is not necessary. Should be good enough for that. Thanks for watching and good luck at the graduation, I hope you get some great photos! Cheers 😁🙌🏼
what affordable camera would you recommend for someone that wants to get into taking film pictures? i think you mentioned one in the video but im not sure
Hello, does it only lets you take 27 photos? And if I finished those amount can I still use it or it won’t work, or does it have something that lets you take more pictures
This is a disposable film camera, it's designed to be disposed of after you use it, to throw it away. The number of photos is based on the film roll inside the camera. Some of these cameras can be reloaded and reused. The easiest to do that is the Kodak Funsaver disposable camera. I made a couple videos about this, link here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-tSJzhSKN6cM.html And link here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-7c5c_ZSQ2Jk.html
Do you mean winding up the film before taking each individual shot? it will stop automatically and that is how you know that you are ready to take a shot. Hope that helps, thanks for watching and commenting as well! Cheers 🙌🏼✨
hi! i recently bought one (maybe a month ago) and i turned the flash on and the little pop up didn’t turn red. it used to turn on, so does this mean the battery is dead or do you know if there’s a way I can fix it?
Yes, you can, provided you have the correct tools for it, you'll need a dark room or film-changing bag, a developer bath, and the requisite amount of chemistry correctly, among other things. It's definitely possible, but not suited for beginners, I hope that helps! Thanks for watching and for taking the time to share a comment as well! Cheers 🙌🏼✨
Hello after taking a photo (even if I’m not going to immediately take another) is it recommendable to crank it? Or do i have to wait to crank it until I’m going to actually take another photo?
Makes no real difference on the actual photo, it's more about you and how do you normally use the camera. If you want to be ready to take photos at any moment, then you can wind up the film, however, winding up the film and putting the camera on a pocket or backpack might press the shutter and take a shot by accident, like butt-dialling someone by accident. Up to you, just know that technically or quality-wise, makes no difference. Hope that helps! Thanks for watching and for taking the time to share a comment as well! Cheers ✨🙌🏼
Maybe the Kodak Funsaver disposable camera would work best for you, it's a higher ISO camera (at ISO 800). That means higher light sensitivity, great for shooting indoors, or places when you don't have abundant light! Use the flash only when absolutely necessary, maybe in really dark spots. Hope that helps, thanks for watching and good luck with the shoot! 🙏🏼✨
@@Jorge-Perez it's very bright in the hospital room, I actually already ordered two of the Fuji quicksnaps ooops. Hoping for the best.. Thanks for your time.
Hey there, you need to get the film roll developed at either a photo lab or department store, and then you can request them to either print the photos or scan them into digital files. Any local photo lab, Walmart or Costco can do that. Hope that helps! Thanks for watching and for leaving a comment as well! Cheers 🙌🏼😁
Yes! it's almost identical, so the process should be very similar. If you're interested in reloading it then I recommend the Kodak Funsaver disposable camera. I made a video about it so you can follow the step by step guide to reload it! Thanks for watching and for sharing a comment as well! Cheers 😁🙏🏼
I used to own it, a great camera for the price. I still think to this day that the X-T3 is the best bang for the buck that Fujifilm offers, do you have one? or are you looking into getting one? Thanks for watching and for taking the time to share a comment as well! I appreciate it. Cheers 😁🙏🏼
AHHHHH HELP!! IM GOING TO NYC SO I BOUGHT ONE FOR THE FIRST TIME AND I WAS MESSING AROUND WITH IT AND I ACCIDENTALLY “ADVANCED THE FILM TO ZERO” I HAVEN’T TAKEN ANY PHOTOS YET!! IM SO NERVOUS!?! DOES THAT MEAN ITS BROKEN!? DO I NEED TO GO BUY A NEW ONE NOW!?!
Hi Hailey, the shot counter on disposable cameras start at the last exposure, in this case 27, and every time you take a shot , one by one, it slowly rolls back to 0. You normally wind the film, and then take a shot. That is the only way to move from, let's say 27, to 26, etc. The camera will not allow you to just wind up the film indefinitely, it will only allow to you wind up the necessary film for a single shot, and pressing the release shutter (taking a photo) is the only way to progress. So there's 2 scenarios here: you either winded the film indefinitely and the camera did not stop you the way it should, or, you manually winded, and took a shot, winded and took a shot, winded and took a shot, all the way from 27 to 0, If that is the case, then the film is already exposed, (Already wasted). If the camera allowed you to just keep winding the film from 27 to 0 without hard stops, then the camera was probably defective. Can you share a bit more about what happened? Hope that helps, and good luck with your trip! Thanks for watching! Cheers ✨🙌🏼
@@Jorge-Perez i forgot to reply but i did figure it out! i totally misunderstood the instructions on the box and thought i ruined it but thankfully i didn’t! my only problem now is i’m about to get them developed and i realized that i didn’t turn the flash on! it was a bit dark but there were a decent amount of lights around where i took the photo(s) is that going to be a problem? am i still going to be able to see the picture?
Not user friendly to reload and reuse, for that purpose I recommend the Kodak FunSaver disposable camera. This one costs between $10 & $15 dollars, so definitely affordable. Hope that was helpful, thanks for watching and taking the time to share your thoughts as well, cheers! 🙏🏼✨
It might be a bit dark, using a higher ISO film might work for you, like the kodak funsaver 800 ISO. Regardless, try to use it in moments where there's a lot of light, or bright situation, Hope that helps! Thanks for watching and good luck! 🙌🏼✨
Ideally, you would develop the film before it expires, but if you do end up waiting, you can still develop the film after expiration. Once it expires, the film starts to degrade, but it's still there, you may lose some quality, detail etc when you develop later, but you can still do it. Some images might be gone or affected more than others, but for the most part, you can still get photos out of it. Hope that helps! thanks for watching and for taking the time to share a comment as well! And good luck!
@@Jorge-Perez I bought mine online from a seller who had one unused and still boxed. i didn’t realise the processing expiry date was 2016 and i don’t know how he didn’t either…
None of these photos were shot at night, not at got developed properly or exposed to light well. And you should always try to avoid the flash anyways to get more consistent colours. Thanks for watching and sharing a comment as well. Cheers! 🙌🏼✨
You can either request it when you develop the film or get a film scanner as well. There's more information on my "How To Unload Film & Reuse Your Disposable Fujifilm Camera" video. Thanks for watching and leaving a comment as well! 🙏🏼
I would not worry about it too much.. Most photographs shot outside look decent enough. Indoor photographs look pretty decent too if you have a source of light around, windows, houselights, etc. Worse case scenario you can request the photo lab to also give you digital files and edit them a bit later on! Cheers 🙌🏼✨
@@Jorge-Perez they didn’t turn out, is there anyway i can email you the files and see if you can salvage any of them for me, i would pay you if you could try :( i’m super bummed out
Oh no, sorry to hear that! 😕 When you say they didn't turn out, what do you mean exactly? the photos are not exposed correctly? or nothing is exposed at all? (all black) Did you get your film strips from the lab? did they scanned the files for you? just trying to get a sense of what the deal is... thanks!
Not that I know of, these are pretty affordable, around $15 or so, Also the Kodak funsaver as well. Check that one out, maybe you can find it for under $15. Hope that helps, thanks for watching and for sharing a comment. Cheers 🙏🏼✨
Not these ones in particular, but I did make a video about the Kodak Funsaver disposable cameras, which are really easy to open up and reload, here's the video!: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-7c5c_ZSQ2Jk.html Hope that helps! Thank you for watching and for taking the time to share a comment as well! Cheers 😁🙏🏼
yeah no thanks. the whole “productive cycle” with these disposable cameras are a pain in the ass. too much work.. might as well shoot on your phone with a much better quality.