Lomography OKTOMAT Compact 35mm Camera with 8 Serial Lenses



  • One shot produces 8 sequential images on a single 35mm Negative.
  • Macro - movie feature.
  • Size: 4.25" x 3" x 1.25" (11cm x 7.5cm x 3.2cm).
  • Weight: 0.4lb (0.2kg), Film Type: 35mm Negative, Slide and B&W.
  • Serial Exposure time: Approximately. total 2.5 seconds for all lenses to fire.




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Lomography OKTOMAT Compact 35mm Camera with 8 Serial Lenses










   Brand: Lomography


   Model : 920


   Customer Rating :


   Availibility : Usually ships in 1-2 business days





Lomography OKTOMAT Compact 35mm Camera with 8 Serial Lenses Overviews



Swing your head around and imagine your two eyes multiplying into 8 winking in a 2.5-second, serial succession. You, my friend, have tasted only the very beginning of Oktomatic pleasure. With one touch of the shutter button, its 8 tiny lenses fire in turn, creating a multi-frame mini photo vignette. Upload your masterpiece to lomography.com and create a full-action MiniMovie! Uses standard 35mm film and standard processing. SHOOT!! And 8 clack's later your subject is cleanly sliced into 8 little frames, boiled, and served. It's no Hollywood feature, but believe us, 8 frames can tell quite a tale. With the Oktomat, you're on your way to a shining Lomographic academy award



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Lomography OKTOMAT Compact 35mm Camera with 8 Serial Lenses CustomerReview



This is my second purchase from the "toy camera" line and I must say - it's tons of fun, especially if you follow the lomographer's mantra and shoot from the hip. The Oktomat is a tough little camera -it bangs around in my purse everyday just in case I happen upon something interesting to photograph (or something uninteresting that I can photograph in an interesting way). I love the occasional light leaks and the slight dreamy blur of all the photos. This camera is not for the perfectionist - it's for the experimental crowd. And I agree with some other reviewers - the best photos are of moving objects.

Notes: The eight consecutive clacks really sound more like a grind, don't let this worry you. And there is a small black piece on the top of the camera - the film advance leaver should stay to the back of this, you may have to pop it back into place once in a while. All part of the low tech fun!


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