Ilford Sprite 35-II Manual: Load Film, Change the Battery, Flash, and Take a Photo
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- Опубліковано 16 лип 2024
- Made by Corex, the Ilford Sprite 35-II is the follow-on model to the older Ilford Sprite. These cameras are intended to be lightweight and take quick, simple, lo-fi photos. Based on legacy reusable and disposable film camera technology, nothing new or groundbreaking exists in these, but they are fun and can do a good job when needed.
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Video Index:
0:00 - Intro
0:08 - Ilford Sprite 35-II Reusable Film Camera Tutorial Walkthrough Video Manual
0:26 - Ilford Sprite 35-II Reusable Film Camera Overview
2:40 - Ilford Sprite 35-II Reusable Film Camera Features - Top
3:04 - Ilford Sprite 35-II Reusable Film Camera Features - Back
3:24 - Ilford Sprite 35-II Reusable Film Camera Features - Bottom
3:43 - Ilford Sprite 35-II Reusable Film Camera Feature - Inside
4:48 - Loading and Unloading Film in the Ilford Sprite 35-II Reusable Film Camera
8:41 - Change the Ilford Sprite 35-II Reusable Film Camera’s Battery
9:31 - Using a Flash with the Ilford Sprite 35-II Reusable Film Camera
10:14 - Taking a Photo with the Ilford Sprite 35-II Reusable Film Camera
10:42 - Taking a Double Exposure with the Ilford Sprite 35-II Reusable Film Camera
10:57 - Tips for using the Ilford Sprite 35-II Reusable Film Camera
13:01 - Notes on the Ilford Sprite 35-II Reusable Film Camera
13:28 - Things NOT to do with your Ilford Sprite 35-II Reusable Film Camera
References:
www.sinopromise.com
corexcorporation.com/camera/
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"Call Waiting" by Future Joust used under active license from Epidemic Sound at the time of this video's upload. - Навчання та стиль
David sorry for mentioning this but you forgot to talk about the 2 apertures that all those cameras have. If you open the back and change to flash on and off you will see what I'm talking about. Thank for you videos about film, I love it. Keep the awesome work 👍. Cheers
I did forget about that. Not all of these cameras have that feature, but you're right and I think I forgot that on all of them that do.
@@DavidHancock I believe that almost all cameras with that type of switch for flash have the 2 apertures, maybe there are few that don't change nothing. I'm just saying about that because no one in the youtube talks about that feature, and it's a great feature. Just remove the battery and you can change apertures. Only a bulb mode is missing.
ah.. uses a size 'aaa' battery - good to know!
I had issues on my last film where the shutter read S after a few pictures, so I assumed it was out. My current film is doing the same, should I unload my film and hope for the best or is it something else?
If the shutter fires, the film is advancing just fine. A lot of these cameras, which are all made by Corex and have the exact same internal components, slip back to "S" randomly. They seem to use a lot of components which may or may not be made properly.
Any sample pics that come out of that cheap plastic camera
I have a review of the Dubblefilm Show that has pics galore, but this batch of cameras I had to send back before I could use them.
Why would someone buy that crap. I had a Coke Cola toy camera that took nice pictures but again it was a toy.
These have been popular as first film cameras. Though I think there are better options, these are pretty simple.
@@DavidHancock Yes. For some people the simplicity is the point. Personally I think these cameras are too expensive for what they are and I'd rather buy some vintage camera for the same money. But I can see the appeal if someone isn't a collector or gear enthusiast and they just want to snap pictures like it's 1969 without messing with a lot of settings.
@@olavl8827 what about the 1970s?