First Photos From My Leica Sofort....

Vince Lupo

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I never planned on getting a Leica Sofort, but I won it on Friday night so I can't really complain. It was the 1st Place Award for the Leica Store DC's National Juried Exhibition, and I was the lucky guy 🙂

My only other experience with Instax Mini film was with the Fuji SP-1 wireless printer for my X100T, and I never liked the results from it. I was hoping that the Sofort would change my mind about this format, but so far the answer is no.

Below are my first shots -- I have to say they're pretty 'meh'. This is the Leica-branded monochrome film, and I find that the blacks aren't really black and the highlights are generally blown. On the plus side, the photos are reasonably sharp.

The camera has three exposure modes -- 'normal', 'brighter' and 'darker', so beyond that there isn't really a way to control exposure that I can see. It's pretty much just 'point and shoot'. Most of the photos below were taken at the 'darker' setting. Plus you can't control depth of field at all (it's an f/12.7 lens), so it's a bit of a challenge to get creative with it (at least for me!). You're really just left to use composition/perspective to make anything interesting, so perhaps that's a good thing for me. Definitely will test my abilities!

I think the next step is to try out the Fuji-branded monochrome film to see if there's a difference (I watched a YouTube video that demonstrated that there is), and then check out the colour film options. I'll post additional photos here as I progress (or regress???).

For what it is, the camera itself seems reasonably well-made, though it has the cryptic phrase 'designed by Leica' (meaning, Made in China) printed on the box. Plastic body and lens of course, though there is a bit of metal here and there (specifically the shutter release button, the camera strap lugs and yes, the red dot). Functionally it's interesting -- you do have some options in the menu (scene-shooting options, flash options, macro, self-timer, plus a couple of other things). It also has a tripod socket, a pretty decent camera strap and a rechargeable battery with charger (along with North American and European plug options). The camera also has an auto-shutoff feature if it hasn't been used for about 5 minutes, which is both good and not so good: If you have the camera's menu options set a certain way (flash off, macro on etc), once the camera auto-shuts off, you have to reset everything once you turn it back on to shoot. I have no clue how the Sofort compares with the Fuji Instax Mini 90, but one thing I know is that it's more than twice the price!

Overall the camera has potential, but I'm not sure how much I'm going to use it ($1 per mediocre shot will get a bit expensive after a while!). If anyone has any experience with the Sofort or thoughts about it, please do share!

My Big Prize!

From Dusk Till Dawn 3
by Vince Lupo, on Flickr

First Shots

First Shots from the Sofort
by Vince Lupo, on Flickr
 
Vince, your standards are obviously much higher than mine as I like those photos!
And the stormtrooper finish to the camera is cool.

I'm not sure how the film is different being Leica or Fuji branded, as it is all made by Fuji.

p.s. congrats on being the big winner.
 
Good luck, Vince. My first film pack with the Land 250 was not great. The light meter/sensor was off. The solution seems to be to go back and try again.
 
Congrats on winning one... it may be $1 pre shot, but factor in the $300 you didn't spend. Have fun with it. I returned mine due to your same thoughts... but I paid full price.
 
Vince, first congratulations on the win! Very cool.

Second, it's a new system. New camera, new film, give it some time. I'm sure you will get the hang of it. Try different films, lighting, hand-held flash (old fashioned slaves should work well) perhaps.

Again, congratulations on the win and the fun prize!

B2 (;->
 
I'm making a few experiments to see how this camera focuses and try to understand how it chooses exposure.

Seems like it tries to go straight down the middle, so the highlights will generally blow out and shadows will be muddy. Additionally, this camera doesn't like backlighting -- the photo will usually turn out dark, so I'll have to compensate by choosing the 'brighter' option when I shoot those kinds of scenes.

This photo is pretty sharp in reality, and I think the camera actually handled this scene pretty well (this is the Fuji Monochrome film). Scanned with my Epson Artisan 710 flatbed -- nothing fancy and a few years old.

The subject matter? Well the wisdom of that choice is debatable 🙂


Sofort Vinny
by Vince Lupo, on Flickr
 
Looks good Vince. I suppose you'll grow to like it like all other things.
I'm of the opinion that this camera was designed for the fun factor.
A good way to introduce people to photography.
The Fuji Instax are a hit with the younger ones.
Been wanting to click the buy on this, but keep going back to the Instax Wide 300.
 
Again, congratulations, Vince, and also on the new toy. The more I look at it, the more it reminds me of the original Polaroid Swinger, which was the first camera I ever owned (1970).

I know you'll get used to using it as you learn its intricacies. Nothing at all wrong with the compositions, which makes the final results all the better. It was designed as an enthusiasts camera, so don't expect too much.

PF
 
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