Those old fixed focus cameras really were easy to use. Start with a K1000 and things get difficult.
Let's start with focusing. If you've never had to focus it can be a learning experience. First off you need to understand that the lens is wide open when you focus, if the aperture is too open that not everything is in focus. Most kids have never used a wide aperture camera.
ISO? Whats that? Oh, I can change it? No? What's the point then?
Shutter speed. Well 1 sounds great! Why is everything blurry? Have to go over 1/60? Why is everything dark now?!
Aperture. What is depth of field? This is confusing, you say small numbers are bigger and bigger numbers are smaller? And now you say stay away from the smallest and biggest numbers? Then why are they on there?
Meter. So, get the needle in the middle. But don't let the shutter speed drop too low. Or the aperture. Oh, can't move the ISO which is not ISO because the stupid camera says ASA for some reason. WTF is center weight?!
Ok, whatever. I finished the puny 24 shots. Now what? I have to PAY to get it developed? $5 for 24 pictures? What? I need to pay to get prints?
Or
Open Iphone. Open App. Click. Done.
i don't know ...
sounds like you are over complicating things
fixed focus sure
focusing a k1000 was not hard, still isn't
and neither is anything else..
the funny thing about this website ( and other photography sites )
is they make EVERYTHING seem so hard that it is no wonder why
people might get turned off .. the reality of it is it isn't hard
when i bought my first 4x5 camera ( speed graphic and then a graphic view 2 )
i had heard it was so difficult, that it was going to take forever to learn and understand ...
and it wasn't furthest from the truth.
the hardest thing was remembering the lens was open to focus and i had to close it to put the film in
or it would be exposed...
as for the questions you asked ...
i had never focused a camera before and it wasn't hard
i had no idea about fstops or asa's or shutter speeds
or how to use a light meter and it took maybe about IDK 10 minutes to learn
it seems a little over kill to suggest a kid can't do something that really isn't hard
to understand or grasp because they are being set up to fail before they even try.
it is amazing, that anyone before "now" even was permitted to use a camera "back in the day"
cause it is so hard ...
