Great little fun camera for the budget conscious photographer 📸 I hope kodak produce a 'premium' version of this camera with a better lens and higher quality build materials? I have the 1960s Olympus Pen ee half frame camera, even though it was marketed as a 'budget' camera for the travelling photographer, it's made of aluminium and other metals, has a well engineered solid feel and the lens is a zuiko glass lens which olympus put a lot of the budget into. I've added your channel, hopefully, you'll connect with another film photographer 📸
Hey! Great video, great review, one thing that I think you should time-step the video, so the viewers can see what you talking about between this 12 minutes (for example: "image quality" 3:08-4:08), that would be really helpful. Keep up man!
Thanks for a good review. You are the second now that tells about the strangely blurry photos. I am sure it is not you, you can hold a 1/100 steady. One reviewer said that the original model had sharper images and not this blurriness issue. I guess you have not testes the original model?
I wish they added some sort of metal weight to the camera, that way it would be easier to not get blurry photos. Although with the cheap plastic the camera might explode on impact after being dropped so who knows. also funny that you mention the quality being similar to the reto camera. The h35 and h35n cameras are actually manufactured by reto, they just pay kodak to be able to use their name on the branding 🥴
Hello! I think I heard you say at around 6:22 that this camera's fixed aperture is at F22. I don't think it is, I thought it was at around F8 from what I've read, while the previous H35 has a fixed aperture of F9.
Great little fun camera for the budget conscious photographer 📸
I hope kodak produce a 'premium' version of this camera with a better lens and higher quality build materials?
I have the 1960s Olympus Pen ee half frame camera, even though it was marketed as a 'budget' camera for the travelling photographer, it's made of aluminium and other metals, has a well engineered solid feel and the lens is a zuiko glass lens which olympus put a lot of the budget into.
I've added your channel, hopefully, you'll connect with another film photographer 📸
Hey! Great video, great review, one thing that I think you should time-step the video, so the viewers can see what you talking about between this 12 minutes (for example: "image quality" 3:08-4:08), that would be really helpful. Keep up man!
That’s an awesome idea! Thanks for the feedback. Definitely something I will add to future videos to make them efficient
Thanks for a good review. You are the second now that tells about the strangely blurry photos. I am sure it is not you, you can hold a 1/100 steady. One reviewer said that the original model had sharper images and not this blurriness issue. I guess you have not testes the original model?
I wish they added some sort of metal weight to the camera, that way it would be easier to not get blurry photos. Although with the cheap plastic the camera might explode on impact after being dropped so who knows.
also funny that you mention the quality being similar to the reto camera. The h35 and h35n cameras are actually manufactured by reto, they just pay kodak to be able to use their name on the branding 🥴
That’s is so crazy! Yeah the quality is absolutely low when I picked this out I was like this feels like a camera I always own lol
Great content buddy!
Thank you! Appreciate that!
Hello! I think I heard you say at around 6:22 that this camera's fixed aperture is at F22. I don't think it is, I thought it was at around F8 from what I've read, while the previous H35 has a fixed aperture of F9.
Your so right it is an F8 totally messed that up! Great catch!
It's F/11 and F/8 for the "flash on" option
What film good for indoors for this camera?
I would stick with Highr ISO films.