Отзывы о Фотоаппарат Fujifilm Instax Mini 12
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Another awesome feature about this kit is that everything has its own case. The telephoto and fish-eye lenses come in little leather pouches and the filters come in a hard case. I received this as a Christmas present along with a Swiss Army camera case that has enough pockets and dividers that everything fits perfectly and will stay safe.
There aren't any instructions or usage tips included in the kit, but I still have the book that came with my camera and there were quite a few good tips in there. The tripod is adorable, but not too practical. Even without the extra lenses on my camera, it is too small to hold it and it topples over. I have a pocket-size digital camera that will probably work on it. Other than that, I couldn't be happier with this set.
PS: I looked up the items directly from Opteka's website and one lens on its own cost more than this set.
I saw this product and it seemed to tick all the boxes in terms of a replacement - unfortuntley this is not the case. After charging the battery for several hours the first time i went to use the camera it worked ok for about 2 mins then it just shut down/froze due to lack of power with lens open/extended. I had to use the power switch for power to be restored & again after a few mins the camera shut down/powered off.
This continued to happen all the time with this battery in the camera so i have resorted to using the old battery again - the camera works fine the battery only last for a short while but my camera is more reliable than when using this product.
This was a very disappointing replacement and a waste of money really as it isn't compatible and has made using my camera more frustrating and rendered it practically impossible to take/view pictures when it keeps powering off!!
I take it with me whenever I go out. The batteries last well unless you do lots of movie recording, but just take spares.
My son keeps trying to steal it so I may have to get him one for Christmas.
The pictures are nice and detailed with very little noise when I was editing. There were initial issues with indoor lighting and yellow glow but this was acceptable after the sensor normalised after a few seconds. The laminated flooring probably made the problem worse.
Zoom was (almost too) responsive and after taking time getting used was able to track my daughter and antics very quickly. It also gave me the opportunity to take natural scenes and poses (try getting a toddler to smile for the camera) without sticking the lens in her face.
At this price you get a lot of camera and specification for your money. The 15X optical zoom is something most cameras don't even approach. However framing the picture comes with a lot of practice so I recommend some playing around time before expecting to get good results more than half the time. (the reason why i am reviewing now). Manual and digital antishake helps a lot but takes a longer time between click and picture taken.
This is a great camera for
1) training for your eventual SLR
2) not being fussed on carrying about lenses.
3) a bit more oomph than your point and click.
4) having an HD recording option.
There are newer cameras, faster cameras and probably better picture cameras (the latest Lumix series comes to mind to encompass all these features). But definitely none put together quite as well as this package and at this price. A little hint, Fuji cameras go down in price fairly quickly and increasingly better offers will do the rounds especially during festive periods. I think orignal RRP was around 299 pounds.
No carry case but my order included tv connectivity. For completeness, reading the trustedreview commentary (most comprehensive)of this camera, full zoom can cause some convex bulging of straight lines (eg roads) in a picture. For my everyday use it isn't an issue.
Sigma lenses. This camera provides at least 2 to 3 ways to accomplish most tasks and
you can tailor controls and settings to suit your needs and preferences.
I am also pleased with corp. product support from Fuji. The seller
provided prompt delivery and satisfactory assistance.
The image stabilization, dynamic range expansion, equivalent zoom range of 28-800mm (including digital) and high resolution are giving me the best pictures I have ever taken.
My favorite settings:
aperture priority or manual (right next to each other on the knob)
color: high
tone: hard
ISO: 400
Dynamic expansion: 400% (requires ISO 400)
The dynamic expansion really improves the brightness capture range. I guess this what they used to call lattitude in film photography. I have definitely noticed fewer blown highlights and fewer blotchy, near-black areas.
Neat feature: if you're in aperture priority and decide to go manual, it's just one click away on the mode knob and your aperture choice is automatically carried over to manual. The metering switches to a very convenient slider that lets you instantly compare your settings with what the meter is predicting. This feature essentially lets you intuitively set exposure compensaion in a visual way without fooling with a separate button or function.
I've never had a camera with image stabilization. Wow. Handheld shots with telephoto, pulling the neckstrap tight, really surprised me.
Fuji wisely moved the 2 and 10 sec self timers out of the menu and right on the 4-way selector, so when you're doing tripod work, you make 2 clicks and hit the shutter to make hands off shots. I do this a lot so this was a major productivity enhancement.
I'm finding that I use the extra zoom much more than I had anticipated. You can get very personal head-and-neck pictures of people, instead of the usual head-to-waist shots, without getting so physically close to them that you artificially change their behavior.
Being able to zoom while taking a movie produces results good enough that I haven't bothered to buy a video camera.
The tilting LCD makes it easy to get low and high angle shots. When taking a movie, you can put the camera on your tripod, tilt the LCD down, and hold the camera way up in the air while still being able to see the framing.
I especially like how you can set the focus to manual, yet still hit the autofocus button to preset and lock the focus at a certain point. If you also set the exposure in manual, there's nothing left for the camera to calculate when you hit the shutter and response time is quite fast.
There is so much extra resolution available, that you can easily crop out very useful photos from inside the full frame without worrying about losing detail. Even when you use the digital zoom, you're still getting 800mm of zoom at 5 megapixels! One of the first things I do in post processing is resize and throw away excess content, unless I anticipate using the image for a poster print. My favorite way to get a panorama is to zoom out, then crop the top n bottom out of the image.
I use one glass filter, a Hoya Moose's warming circular polarizer. I picked up a 67 to 77mm step-up ring and use Cokin P series filters.
Definitely get a coupla spare batteries. There's one seller here on Amazon that sells 2 packs of higher capacity than Fuji's battery.
I think the SDHC 8GB, class 6 cards are the way to go. I got a couple, and one with a bundled reader, as I can't just pop them in my computer like the XD cards. Scads of video recording time.
WalMart sells a camcorder case (made by Extreme) that is a perfect fit for this camera, holding the camera sideways with the memory card access door up, and pockets to hold batteries, charger, cables, and even room for a minipod and a cut down piece of Kodak grey/white card. I have the polarizer, Fuji lens hood, and the dustcap all on the camera and it still fits snugly in the case. It also will hold the original Moose filter box.
I realize that full-fledged DSLR's could take better pictures, but you'd probably have to spend over 5 times the cost of this camera (including lenses) to do better and still have to hassle of carrying everything and changing lenses. Don't forget the dust patrol, too.
Regards,
Mark
There is a firmware update from 1.0 to 1.1 on the Fuji site that is supposed to fix LCD display issues (I wasn't aware of any!), but easy to apply via a memory card, there are instructions on Fuji site. Check your version by holding 'Display/Back' button whilst powering up.
Other good features? flash is surprisingly powerful for its size, but not super quick to recharge, adequate would be fair.
It takes AA batteries which makes sourcing emergency power easy, with an 8gb card on full resolution its got room for 1500+ pictures so you use it a lot, best to sort out the good shots later.
I use Nimh rechargeables and as someone else mentioned the battery warning monitor is rubbish! it comes on massively too soon, even with fresh high powered nimh batteries it comes on after a few flash pictures, just IGNORE it and carry on. The camera doesn't care, recharge when your ready not when the camera says so. You will be fine.
Colour can be slightly flat in some lights so I tend to leave mine on the Fuji chroma setting rather than standard as I prefer its boost.
You can get a tiny IR remote trigger control (compatible not Fuji) if your kit doesn't include one, off well known Auction sites for a few quid works fine at 10 to 24 feet and means Dad can be in the pictures too without faffing with timers.
Can't think of anything else to add just now, but if your looking to make the step up from a compact without carrying a crate of bits and lenses around, want a good auto mode to get you started then you have found the perfect choice. Will it make you a better photographer? well your not supposed to say this but yes! It will encourage new interest in what your doing and with the zoom make you more aware of things like framing of your subject in the shot and so on, leading to more thoughtfully arranged shot. Its speed will give you new access to action shots too.
Highly recommended.






