Instax: Does everything have to be made of plastic?

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Helinophoto

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I am looking at Instax with interest, the film seems to be very nice technically and the wide is probably capable of better results than the old Polaroids.

However....

Now that Leica came out with a Instax.camera, I was eager to know more about it, but to my dismay, there was no focusing-option and the lens was made from..........wtf...plastic??

After checking, I cannot find any Instax-cameras that offer the most basic thing:
- Focusing
- Ability to set the shutter-speed.
- Actual glass lens.

What kind of waste is this?

Are there any cameras at all, capable of shooting Instax-film, that has a lens made from glass (duh) and some focusing abilities?

Anything on the horizon?

I find it saddening that the ability of Instax-film is wasted on poor resolution lenses and pre-set focus, crap-cameras.
 

locutus

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There is the InstantFlex TL70, its a manual focus TLR with glass lenses that shoots Instax Mini, aperture priority (with shift) only though.

Its nice and cute, (dont expect Rollei or Yashica build quality) but personally i find it to expensive for me, YMMV.

wasted on poor resolution lenses

Keep in mind that Instax never will really be that sharp, the holder mechanism will never keep the film flat enough.
 
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Helinophoto

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Yea, I saw that one actually, the price-point was kind of high, especially for the small format that instax-mini is.

If it had been wide, I would have considered a purchase (love tlr's).

I am sure it's not up to par with my 2.8F :wink:

The marked for a high-quality camera is there, especially since Instax has had an explosive development the past year or so. (sales surpassing Fuji's own *D* cameras).
 

darkosaric

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If you are looking for a wide film format - this is the best way to go:
https://shop.lomography.com/en/belair-instant-back
If this is still not enough for you - then custom made cameras are the only option. I know couple of guys here are modifying Holga panoramas with true nice lens with leaf shutter. You can contact somebody and order custom made Holga Panorama with instax back, or custom made Belair.
 

Nodda Duma

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There's absolutely nothing wrong with using plastic optics if the design is executed correctly...and it's not difficult to do so.

The Instax is a great camera... I tried to get my 11 and 9 yr olds to shoot an auto-everything film camera but they quickly lost interest. The Instax, however... they actually use the Instax that came for Christmas.

Anything that turns kids onto shooting analog is a great product.

Aside from that.. buy the right tool for the job.
 
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Helinophoto

Helinophoto

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Well, that may be fine and dandy, for young people and kids, but I would like to have a camera that lets me actually focus, lets me control exposure. which does not create funny chosting in certain light and that is sharp enough, to create a shot that can be scanned and enlarged.

If plastic was the answer, why are we still shooting with glass? :smile:

Right now, the cameras out there are nothing but all-plastic toys, catering to everyone else but photographers, which is a shame, because the film itself is capable of so much more.

Here's what happens when you start gaining control and start using proper lenses:
http://www.thephoblographer.com/201...m-instax-wide-300-camera-fantastic-portraits/

Too bad there are no good alternatives out there, Leica was a huge disappointment.
 
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Ko.Fe.

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locutus

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and that is sharp enough, to create a shot that can be scanned and enlarged.

I think you are chasing something that just wont happen; Fujifilm themselves specify that Instax has a resolution of 10 to 12 lp/mm, add in the lack of film flatness with film packs and there really isn't the headroom to enlarge anything.
 

Nodda Duma

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If plastic was the answer, why are we still shooting with glass? :smile:

Plastic is not THE answer. Plastic is AN answer.

Everything designed is designed to requirements. Different requirements... different product. The best designs are "good enough", because going beyond that unnecessarily drives up cost and complexity. That is how engineering is supposed to work.

In any case, my point is that your expectations do not seem to align well with the product's capabilities. I wouldn't recommend acquiring an Instax-type camera.
 
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Helinophoto

Helinophoto

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BTW, zone focusing is only crappy in hands of crappy photographers.

Then, I suppose you have glued your 50's at 2-3 meters and stopped them down to f16? :smile:
First thing people looked for after creating the camera obscura, was how to make it sharper, having a locked lens at some hyperfocal distance and some f-stop is _limiting_ and gives you so-so definition at just about any distance.

Filling the frame with the subject and enlarge your medium, will give you a better result. Close-ups with Instax is generally crap and so are things that are further away.

Night-shots will get better too if you could adjust the aperture.

If you cannot focus, you might as well just drop the plastic and shoot with a pinhole ^^
 

Ko.Fe.

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No :smile: I'm slightly more advanced. I learned how to use DoF scale on the lens. By this method f5.6 is enough for scale focusing of 50mm. But with Instax cameras I provided links for, the DoF is deeper. It is hard to miss it.

Then, I suppose you have glued your 50's at 2-3 meters and stopped them down to f16? :smile:
First thing people looked for after creating the camera obscura, was how to make it sharper, having a locked lens at some hyperfocal distance and some f-stop is _limiting_ and gives you so-so definition at just about any distance.

Filling the frame with the subject and enlarge your medium, will give you a better result. Close-ups with Instax is generally crap and so are things that are further away.

Night-shots will get better too if you could adjust the aperture.

If you cannot focus, you might as well just drop the plastic and shoot with a pinhole ^^
 
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