FilmSpooler

Analog Photography…Toy, Lomo and Vintage

Holga 120 Panoramic Camera

Just showing up on several sites today, Holga released a new 120 panoramic camera, the Holga 120PAN. Announced in November, I just started seeing it pop up on the internet today.  Yeah…I’ve been busy.

Holga 120PAN - Front

Apparently out in limited distribution, vendors are selling this update to the 120WPC (wide pinhole camera) as a soon to be hard-to-find item.

Holga 120PAN - Top

Quick Rundown:

  • 90mm optical lens
  • panoramic viewfinder
  • built in level
  • uses 120 film, but a 35mm adapter will soon be available
  • produces images twice the size of the Holga 120N (around 6 pictures per roll)
  • two hot-shoes
  • tripod mount
  • zone focus (4 zones)
  • shutter: 1/100s

Holga 120PAN - Angle

Where To Buy:

Vendors selling it are Four Corner Store and HolgaDirect for around $90.

My Take:

With all the Lomography cameras that come out every year, it’s nice to see that someone at Holga cares.  I’m looking forward to getting one of these soon.  The sample images I’ve seen so far are looking like the same ones I’ve been getting with my Kodak Six-16 Brownie Juniors.

Samples:

Here are a couple of samples that the vendors have been posting on their websites.  Hopefully, I’ll have my own soon…

Example 1

Example 2

Filed under: Analog News, Toy Camera, , , , , ,

Sticky Spools in my Holga 120N

I used to think that Fuji 120 film didn’t like my Holga 120N.  I was wrong…sorry Fuji.

Every once in a while, the turning of the film advance dial would get sticky and it would be really difficult to move to the next frame.  The further along I would go, the harder it would be to get to frame number 12.  I would eventually get to the last frame, but only after wrestling around a bit with the camera and working up a little sweat.  After all that work, the results after finishing that last shot were either the spooled film not being tightly wound around as it usually should or not being able to finish the roll as the dial was stuck beyond my mortal strength.  Either result usually ended up with my removing of the film from the camera and manually re-winding the film in the dark.

After some asking around and a little experimentation, I think I figured out what happened.

The issue with the loosely wound film was caused because of the missing foam pieces that are usually glued into the film spool compartents in the Holga 120N.  Without the spongy pressure that presses against the winding film, you get pockets of slack as the film is winding around the spool.  The uneven wind of the film would then put pressure against the chamber walls, making it hard to turn the take-up spool.  This can cause pretty bad light leaks (or good ones, if you’re lucky) once you expose the finished roll to light.

Here's a shot of where the missing foam should be. Gotta replace it for future, hassle-free, photo sessions.

The best way to fix this is to replace the foam with similarly sized pieces that are about 3/4″ to 1/2″ inch thick.

The second problem came up from my attempt to temporarily fix the missing foam issue.  I stuck a folded piece of cardboard under the new film spool to add resistence.  Problem was that the cardboard was a little too thick and as the film spool turned and turned, the piece of cardboard would wedge itself deeper under the spool.  In the end, the spool would get stuck and off to the dark room I went.

Here's the newly replaced folded paper sitting under an emptied spool. The piece before it was too thick and the new piece is half the original thickness.

The simple fix to this was to just use a thinner piece of cardboard…or even better, replace the foam with similarly sized pieces that are about 3/4″ to 1/2″ inch thick.

Here’s a shot I took that came from one of my loosely wound spools exposed to light…

The Metro station under Pershing Square in Los Angeles

It’s not too bad of a shot.  The light leak adds a little character to the picture.  What do you think?

Filed under: Analog Life, Tip, Toy Camera, , , , , ,