Camera ready
Lomo cameras make an artist out of even the most novice shutterbug
by Leslie Robarge
Almost everyone who owns a Lomo camera will tell you it's not the best camera
in the world -- that if you want to spend $150 on decent point-and-shoot, you
should go buy a Nikon or a Canon. But as David Evans of Watertown says, quality
isn't the reason people buy them.
When you take pictures with a Lomo, he says, "it's like a guaranteed art photo
for non-artistic people."
It's actually the unreliability of the Russian-made Lomo, short for Lomo
Kompakt Automat, that caught on with a small but dedicated sect of people who
take pride in artsy-looking pictures. Lomos are unpredictable: sometimes you
get blurry images, other times color can be grainy. Light sources in night
photos appear fuzzy, and images look distorted.
Lomo owners like Evans say it's also the cult factor that has fueled the
camera's increasing popularity. The cameras have even spawned their own
lexicon: Lomo photographs are called "lomographs," and people who own Lomos
call themselves "lomographers."
When you purchase a Lomo camera, you get a package of materials, including a
couple of rolls of 35mm film that you can develop free. You are also
automatically inducted into the Lomographic Society International, a forum for
Lomo owners to share their photos and stories. In Boston you can pick one up at
Hunt's Photo & Video, at SBI stores, or online at the Lomographic Society
Web site.
Although the Lomo might not be for everyone, some purist photographers -- like
Matt Thompson of Hunt's Photo -- have been drawn into the fun of owning one.
Still, Thompson says, to the trained eye, there is no substitute for learning
the actual techniques that make photos look artsy.
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Where to get it
* Hunt's Photo & Video, 100 Main Street, Melrose, (781) 662-8822
* SBI Sales Co., 57 JFK Street (Harvard Square), Cambridge, (617) 576-0969; 259
A Street, Boston, (617) 542-0077
* Lomographic Society Web site, www.lomo.com.
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