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La Sardina Camera Sea Pride
 
Key Features
Shoots 35mm Film
22mm Focal Length
36 x 24mm Exposure Area
Two Step Focusing
Inverse Galileo-Type Built-In Viewfinder
Multiple Exposures
Cable Release Connection
1/4" Tripod Screw
Shutter Release Lock
Flash Contact for Fritz the Blitz
 
Lomography Sea Pride Overview
You'll be the hippest photagrapher on the block with Lomography's La Sardina Sea Pride Camera. Evoking maritime design and, of course, a sardine can, the Sea Pride is as cool looking as the pictures it takes! Just pop in some 35mm film and starting shooting.
 
In addition to the classic light leak aesthetics of the "toy camera" the Sea Pride offers up a number of other creative options. A rewind dial and MX switch help you make multiple exposures, while the bulb setting allows you to capture long exposures. You can also screw in a cable release, put the Sea Pride on a tripod, and add an optional Fritz the Blitz flash. Simple though it may seem, the La Sardina is far from it!
 
Sea Pride
Splashed with some good-looking maritime blue, warm gray and red, Sea Pride is the next La Sardina camera to channel a classic vintage sardine can design. It's sleek look and easy-to-use features make it a firm dockside favorite!
La Sardina Features

Mind-blowing wide-angle lens
Rewind dial and MX switch that make multiple exposures easier than ever before!
Film cartridge window on the rear of the camera - to see what film you're shooting

Easy-to-use focusing with two simple settings
Bulb setting for night-time and long-exposure experimentation

Screw-in cable release option
Incredible collection of unique La Sardina editions - a design for every mood and occasion

Achieving the Perfect Settings
Remember that your La Sardina is locked and loaded with a truly mind-blowing wide-angle lens! That means it embraces the "5th Golden Rule of Lomography" to the max - "Approach the objects of your Lomographic desire as close as possible!" Forget about the viewfinder and get as close as possible. And then get even closer! Are you doing it? Okay. We'll be watching to make sure

Getting Ready to Shoot
So you've loaded the film and you're ready to start shooting? Well the first thing to do is make sure your camera is ready to snap up your shots. If the lens barrel is pressed against the camera's body, hold it and pull it away from the camera. Now twist it to the left (if you are looking at the front of the camera) until you feel it lock. Your La Sardina is now locked, loaded and ready for action!

Focusing
Your La Sardina camera is super-easy to use and that's why it comes with fitted with just two simple focusing settings. These are located on the lens ring and you should remember to alter this depending on how close or far away your subject is.
0.6-1m - If whatever you're taking a picture of is between 0.6m and 1m (i.e. close-up) then just be sure that the camera is set to this setting. Just make sure the lens ring is turned to the right position (from the front of the camera.)
 
1m-Infinity - If your Lomographic subject is at least 1m or further away, then turn the lens ring to the left to make use of this focusing setting
 
Shutter Settings
The La Sardina comes complete with a B or 'Bulb' setting which lets you decide how long you want to keep the shutter open and how much light gets in to the camera. To change the shutter settings, you just need to move the small switch that's located on the top of the camera, in front of the viewfinder.
If you take a quick look just in front of the viewfinder, you will see a small switch marked B/N/MX. You can choose between N (Normal) and B (Bulb) mode by simply flicking the switch left or right.
 
You should use the N mode when you are shooting in sunny conditions. N stands for "Normal, 1/100 second".
 
You should use the B mode when you are shooting indoors or in situations where the light is not so great. B stands for "Bulb Shutter", and in this mode the shutter will stay open as long as you hold down the shutter release button
 
Capture wide angle shots and make wild multiple exposures with this early edition 35mm La Sardina.
 
Get ready to sail the high seas with the La Sardina Sea Pride! This 35mm camera is equipped with spectacular wide-angle lens, multiple exposure capabilities and a rewind dial - everything you need for fun-filled and thrill-soaked escapades. Just setting sail on your analogue photography journey? The La Sardina makes a great choice.
 
Additional Information
SKU sp100sp
Cable Release Connection Yes
Battery Type No
Available Apertures fixed f8
Shutter Speeds 1/100 (N), Bulb (B)
Focal Length 22mm
Exposure Area 36x24mm
Film advance Knob
Film Format 35 mm
Flash connection Unique La Sardina Micro Contact
Focusing Zone Focusing
Focusing Distance 0.6m-1m, 1m - Infinity
Frame Counter Auto Frame Counter
Material Plastic
Tripod Mount No
Lightmeter No
View Finder Direct optical viewfinder


 
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FYI


 
 
Lomography is a genre of photography, involving taking spontaneous photographs with minimal attention to technical details. Lomographic images often exploit unpredictable non-standard optical traits of cheap toy camera (such as light leaks and irregular lens alignment), and non-standard film processing techniques, for aesthetic effect. Similar-looking techniques with digital photography, often involving "lomo" image postprocessing filters, may also be considered lomographic. The lomography trend peaked in 2011.

While cheap plastic toy cameras using film were and are produced by multiple manufacturers, lomography is named after the Soviet-era cameras produced by the "Leningradskoye Optiko-Mekhanicheskoye Obyedinenie.

Lomography has been a highly social pursuit, with local clubs organized by The Lomographic Society International (Lomographische AG, a commercial company selling lomo cameras). The company promotes the genre; however, it is not necessary to use the company's products to take lomographic photos.

"Lomography" is claimed as a commercial trademark of Lomographische AG, which their creators associate to a photographic image style and a film camera movement and community facilitated by The Lomographic Society International. However, it has become a genericized trademark; most[citation needed] camera phone photo editor apps include a "lomo" filter.

History
The lomography name is inspired by the former state-run optics manufacturer LOMO PLC of Saint Petersburg, Russia that created and produced the 35 mm LOMO LC-A Compact Automat camera, now central to lomography. This camera was loosely based upon the Cosina CX-1 and introduced in the early 1980s. The LOMO LC-A produces "unique, colorful, and sometimes blurry" images.


Sample shot from a LOMO LC-A
The Lomographic Society International was founded in 1992 by a group of Viennese students interested in the LCA, a camera created by LOMO PLC of Saint Petersburg, Russia. Lomography started as an art movement through which the students put on exhibitions of photos; the art movement then developed into the Lomographische AG, a commercial enterprise.Within the field of photography, a toy camera is a simple, inexpensive film camera.

Despite the name, they are in fact always fully functional and capable of taking photographs, though with optical aberrations due to the limitations of the simple lenses. From the 1990s onward, there has been interest in the artistic use of such cameras, both those designed for children such as the Diana, and others originally intended as mass-market consumer cameras, such as the Lomo LC-A, Lubitel, and Holga.

Many professional photographers have used toy cameras and exploited the vignetting, blur, light leaks, and other distortions of their inexpensive lenses for artistic effect to take award-winning pictures. Toy camera photography has been widely exhibited at many popular art shows, such as the annual "Krappy Kamera" show at the Soho Photo Gallery in the Tribeca neighborhood of New York City. Various publications such as Popular Photography magazine have extolled the virtues of the Diana camera in its own right as an "art" producing image maker. Several books have also featured the work of toy cameras, such as The Friends of Photography's The Diana Show, Iowa by Nancy Rexroth, and Angels at the Arno by Eric Lindbloom.
 

 

 


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