Holga

I have used both Holga and Woca over the past couple of years - it's odd, but the glass lens in my Woca gives much more vignetting and radial distortion than the plastic one in my Holga.

I think it depends which position in the mould tool your particular lens comes from - get an average one and you experience all the nice Holga distortions, get a good one and it's actually a bit too good.

I would suggest having a look at this site: www.toycamera.com lots of interesting stuff over there and a great place to learn about all forms of toy cameras.
 
Jon Claremont said:
Is this the camera you can load 35mm in and expose right over the sprocket holes?

Yes, but you can do that probably with most other MF cameras, I have done it just with the HOLGA, but am planning to try my Certo 6 sometimes.
 
I scoped it on the net.

The camera comes complete with:
"1 Roll of Black Opaque Tape
The perfect solution for light-leaking seams that you want to cover."

How classy. What great customer service. If I bought a Bronica RF645 instead would I get free black tape to cover the light leaks? Or would I have to go out and and buy my own?
 
I've got a message sent to him asking about just buying his modified shutter and lens. I figure it could be highly entertaining to then mount that on a lensboard for my Speed Graphic :eek:

Superwide, not enough coverage for 4x5 and the glories of the plastic lens anyone?

William
 
I bought the woca, and got the model with flash. Dont. The flash uses AA's but they're inside, it just adds weight and cost to a cheap toy camera. The ones without the flash have a hot shoe - a much better solution.

As for holga qualities - I think it still has plenty even with the glass lens. It's still a single element lens with plenty of vignetting and other holgaesque qualities. This is one of my first shots with the holga.
 
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