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The best instant cameras to buy

Instax Mini First launched by Fujifilm in 1998, Instax Mini (£29.50 for 40 shots) snaps offer wallet-sized prints measuring 54 x 86mm, while the actual picture area is a tiny 46 x 62mm. You get 10 shots in each pack and one pack usually costs just under a tenner. Instax Mini offers the biggest range of different films, including monochrome and scores of different coloured borders, many of which are limited edition. Takes around 90 seconds to develop. Instax Square Bringing Instax tech to a bigger print, these square-shaped snaps measure 86 x 72mm with a picture size of 62 x 62mm. Like its Mini counterpart, Instax Square film (£17 for 20 shots) takes around 90 seconds to develop and offer 10 snaps per pack, with a price tag of around £15. The film comes in both colour and monochrome, and there are also a few options with different coloured frames.

Don t Miss: An Impossible Project on the shock return of analogue tech

Humans 10 March 2021 Read Gut Feelings: The microbiome and our health by Alessio Fasano and Susie Flaherty reveals how understanding this alien inner world will make it possible to target medicines to an individual’s needs at the molecular level. Instant Film Watch An Impossible Project, streaming on digital platforms from 15 March, celebrates the return of analogue formats, from Polaroid to vinyl. The film highlights the work of Viennese biologist Florian “Doc” Kaps to reverse the tide of technological “progress”. Read Double Blind by Edward St Aubyn leaps from London to Cap d’Antibes in southern France to a rewilded corner of Sussex, UK, in a thrilling and mischievous tale of ecology, psychoanalysis, genetics and neuroscience.

What s up Doc - how this analogue obsessive saved Polaroid

What s up Doc - how this analogue obsessive saved Polaroid
amateurphotographer.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from amateurphotographer.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Thriving then decimated: the year that was - and wasn t

Thriving then decimated: the year that was - and wasn t - in theatre Thriving then decimated: the year that was - and wasn t - in theatre By Cameron Woodhead Normal text size Advertisement Theatre people will be as glad as anyone to see the curtain close on 2020. Melbourne is rightly proud of its performing arts culture, and until March this year – before the longest theatre closures in modern Australian history – it was in full bloom. Black Ties reimagines the rom-com from a First Nations perspective. Credit:Steven Siewert Last summer feels like a distant era now. Looking back, it exemplified a dynamic, outward-looking, globally interconnected hub of performance Melbourne had come to take for granted.

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