Lomo photography

Posted by Haje Jan Kamps

A Lomo camera is essentially a really, really low quality camera built in Russia. That doesn’t stop it from having a nearly religious following, however, and with the right attitude when wielding one of these cameras, it can be a very liberating photography experience.

Fuelled more by the fantastic PR campaign than by the quality of the actual cameras, the Lomo cameras do something really clever: They trade on their weaknesses. Light leaks? It’s a feature! Bad vignetting on the lens? It adds to the charm!. Impossible to get a correct exposure? It opens up for creativity.

Call us crazy, but it’s actually pretty damn cool.

I used to own a Lomo a while ago, and you can, indeed, get some pretty cool-looking photos with them. Now that low-fi is in, and retro is the way forward, Lomography may be your cheap ticket into photography cool.

The rest of the world is also cottoning on. BBC four, for example, shares this:

In 1991 a group of Viennese students discovered the Lomo Kompakt Automat when on holiday in Prague. This mass-produced Soviet camera was so cheap and easy to use that they shot rolls of film, ignoring the established rules of “good” photography. The resulting snaps were often odd to look at, out of focus and, due to the character of the Lomo lens, garishly coloured. But they were wonderfully fresh. The craze for Lomo spread so fast that when, in 1996, the St Petersburg manufacturers threatened to stop making the camera, Lomographers stepped in to guarantee all future sales.

Some examples

I won’t be pimping my own Lomo photos - they were good, but I didn’t quite like the unpredictability of the Lomo cameras myself, so I sold my camera again. For the examples, why not check out the photos on Flickr tagged with Lomo, or try the rampant fan-base over at the Flickr Lomo Group. There are also dozens of local groups worth checking out.

Enjoy!

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Posted in: All articles • 14 Mar '06

Insights, suggestions and comments

By Luís Brás on July 19th, 2006 (permalink)

It’s easy to turn any digital photo into lomo photography with simple image manipulation software. iStockPhoto has a good article teaching how to do it.

By jps on September 27th, 2006 (permalink)

Orrrr you can buy a lensbaby for your SLR cameras for about what a lomo costs.

Orrrrr you can build your own lens using a holga and a body cap, or any other wide angle plastic lens and a body cap.

By mulyadi on August 10th, 2008 (permalink)

hello i so much interesting wit lomo, please add much gallery here

By Tim B. on November 22nd, 2008 (permalink)

Sorry folks….but….Lomo photography is fantastic! Screw the DSLR & SLR…..I’ll take a cheap lomo anytime……the most important part of photography is the inches behind the camera and my images now because I have taken to lomography have brought me to a new place….freedom!!!!

 

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This site is all about learning more about photography, from the incredibly insightful (rarely) to the dreadfully mundane (also, hopefully rarely) via just about everything in between.

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