X-ray, that's an interesting camera. Could you please tell me how it deals with flare if you can't fit a hood? Is there any way of dealing with dioptre correction? I know it doesn't have an eyepiece, but I have a Yashica 635 and in order to frame the image I have move my glasses so that I don't have to look through them, but in order to use the magnifier for focusing I have to look through my glasses, and to frame a shot with my old kodak digital compact I have to use my reading glasses to see the screen clearly.
It came in todays mail 8 hours ago and not had a chance to see how it deals with flare and really hadn’t thought about a hood or filters.
I’d say if you wanted to modify the camera you could epoxy or glue a filter ring on the mount and use a standard filter size like 39mm. You should be able to pickup a screw-in hood that would fit the filter ring too.
Don’t over think this camera. It’s a toy not a pro level camera and it’s likely you will have some flare. My expectations were in line with this being a digital Holga and I was pleasantly surprised. I’m one that flaws are part of the beauty sometimes and was prepared to exploit the flaws. So far I’m not seeing what I’d call major flaws. I know I’ll find some over time but for $54 who cares. It’s a toy.
I’m planning on trying some street photography with it. Who would even notice you and if they did they wouldn’t take you serious. And if it was stolen or damaged, so what. It’s less expensive than a Leica lens cap.
As far as using glasses, I don’t know your eyes but it’s not a focusing screen, it’s a monitor much like the screen on the back of a dslr.
One thing, I don’t think it’s 12 mp. On my high res monitor, looking at them in photoshop, the native size of 11x11 inches at 300 PPI looks pretty good. But these aren’t files you can res up to 30x30 inches for a museum show. I’m going to print some though and I expect them to look fine at 11x11.
Looking at the images, think Kodachrome contrast / dynamic range.
It’s a plastic toy that I’m going to carry and experiment with. The lack of control is sort of freeing. No thinking about technical details, just concentrate on creativity.