Cosina Flash 35E - I Break, I Fix, I Break Again

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(Edited)

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I can't believe that this is taken with a simple pocket camera. And with one that I, as the tittle says, broke, fixed but broke again while fixing another issue. Well, choosing the right film apparently makes things a lot better and I'm very pleased that Adox film isn't expensive. It's actually pretty cheap!

Weird distortion on the tree branches but I like it. It gives character to the photo.

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Here it is. Bought few years back, cost only two euros and I can truly say that this camera has been worth it.

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The rubber seal under the back lid, around the film, that probably mostly is there to prevent light leakage, not to prevent water go inside the camera, had transformed in to a sticky black goo so I thought it would be a good thing to replace it. It took awhile for me to get all the goo out, it just seemed to generate more and more, until it finally ran out.

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A good opportunity to clean the camera from most of the dust and... is that sand? I hope it's just sand. I don't want to think about what else that could be. (Poo? Dust mite poo? Larvae poo? Cockroach poo?) Again the dust or the sand just seemed to multiply while I was cleaning it. Or it's because all cameras are also dust machines. Devices designed to take photos and generate dust. I believe this camera at least is. So hard to clean and I wanted to avoid taking it apart more because I'm quite sure I would break it for good.

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New, cut rubber band in, the back lid is a little too much out but stayed shut so if it works, it works, some dusting and cleaning, film in and we're good to go.
Such a horrible song, horrible video and horrible clothes. But this is what started playing in my head so now you get to hear it too.

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I managed to get all the parts back after dusting so that the distance indicator is in it's correct place and everything else works too.

Or did it?

Well... the film did't roll and some mysterious spring that should have locked the winding knob in to it's place didn't do what it was supposed to do after taking the first photo and winding the film. Which did not actually wind at all. It must be that the new seal, the rubber band is too thick so that although I thought that the film did start to roll, it somehow got loose and did not co-operate with me.

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So in to the dark closet I wen't, rolled the film back, saw light again as I came out of the closet and took the camera apart. (Yes, I know how that sounds, I would be disappointed in me if I wouldn't do word plays and leave you guessing if it's intentional or true. And that's not even the point. The point is that without double meanings, life would be pointless and meaningless.)

I didn't dismantle everything but so much that I could try to fix the winding knob spring issue. The rubber band obviously had to go. If it leaks light, it leaks and I'm just going to accept it.

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The thing with the winding knob spring is that I had no idea how it was supposed to be and if it was supposed to be the way that was nearly impossible to do, then how would I put the spring in it's place so that the winding knob would stay put and not slid out every time I turn the camera upside down because that's what it did after the first picture and winding and hearing the quiet PLING that indicated that the spring no longer was were it is supposed to be. The internet offered no help for me.

But eventually, as you can see from the pictures above the impossible was done with the help of a big needle.

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I pushed the spring to the other side with the needle and manged to put the top and the tiny loose parts back. The shutter release and the winding knob.

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I think the maneuver required five hands but somehow I managed to do that with only the two that I have.

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Adox film in and of to shoot!

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Adox film in and of to shoot?

After cleaning and opening the camera couple of times, well, first of all almost every screw in the camera that I screwed, no longer tighten properly. The screw threads are gone. So the camera is pretty much screwed. By me. Also, as I apparently played with too much alcohol when cleaning the camera, all the oil or grease or what ever it is that is in the critical places of the camera, is gone and the oil that I added is not as good as the old grease was, the camera now squeaks every time I wind the next frame. Also, the green color that you can see from the viewfinder that indicates the distance, is slightly off. It's now between icons. Half green, half yellow. I do know how to fix that indicator but I'm really reluctant dismantling the camera, yet again, because getting it back together is shear agony.

So I broke, I fixed and broke the camera again and also put the Adox film in several times and took photos with it and wen't to the dark closet to take the film away. It was like Groundhog Day.

Thank goodness it's over.

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This is what it looks like when you expose one frame multiple times.

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Darker and more detail.

This picture represents my groundhog day with Cosina.

But let's see the results.

All the photos are from 2022.

As usual I've done nothing to the photos. (Except the groundhog day photo above.) Few of them might be better if post-processed but as I want to know what kind of results does this camera and this film give in different conditions, I've left them as they are and I'll show you the photos with all of mine and the cameras flaws in the pictures.

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Uuu! Horseys! Cranes! Horses, cranes and primates.

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I am truly amazed that I managed to get the focus on the window reflection of the lady on the bridge. I am shocked that it's sharp. Absolutely shocked.

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I have to confess something to you.
Here goes.

I
Love
Adox
Film!

I can't believe that these are taken with a simple, faulty Cosina pocket camera that few years ago cost only 2 euros!

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I know what you're thinking and no. The focus is not and was not supposed to be on her ass. Asses are nice but that's not what I was aiming for.

You have to believe me.

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Sunny, yesterday my life was filled with rain
Sunny, you smiled at me and really eased the pain

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The dark days are gone, and the bright days are here
My Sunny one shines so sincere"

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Sunlight and #shadows.

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Benches and parks. Let's not forget those. And also underneath the bench photo, one of my favourites.

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What did all this cost me?
Adox HR-50: 4,49€
Film developing: 14,90€
Film scanning to TIFF: 10€

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The best photo that won the glorious place of being the thumbnail of this post.


Film cameras
Balda-Bünde Baldixette
1
Bilora Bella 66
1
Closter C63
1
Cosina Flash 35E
1, 2, 3
Felica
1, 2, 3, 4
Kodak Box 620
1, 2
Kodak Brownie Six-20 Model C
1
Halina Paulette EE II
1
Voigtländer Bessa 66
1
ZIAG Colora F
1

Digital cameras
Sony A6400, 16-50mm
1
Sony A6400, Laowa 25mm f2.8
1
Comparison: Sony A6400, Canon EOS 550D, Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ7, Sony Cyber-shot DSC-P32, Canon PowerShot A550
1, 2



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23 comments
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Bang, I did it again... I just rehived your post!
Week 140 of my contest just started...you can now check the winners of the previous week!
!BEER
9

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For some reason, your title cracked me up. I Break, I Fix, I Break Again

That bridge, is that the one near some farms markets? I think I walked across it when I was there.

I really like all these pictures, there's nothing pretentious about them, they just are and speak for themselves, sort of convey simplicity of life. Anyway, I don't want so sound like an idiot, I really have no idea about photography. They're nice though. The bench photo, third from last, is my favourite.

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It seems that my method of fixing cameras is that something needs to be broken first and if it isn't, that will be arranged. By me. Even though I would prefer the camera to be unbroken, my hands that repair things do not always agree.

Yes, the bridge (Laukonsilta) is near a market square (Laukontori) and it's in the city center so you probably have been there if you've strolled around downtown.

Thanks! Great to hear that you like the photos. And actually, I too have no idea about photography, I just press the trigger and hope for the best and sometimes it works.

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There's an old and wise saying:

What isn't broken must be broken prior to being fixed so it isn't broken, but it is, which is why it needs fixing after it's broken subsequently after being not broken.

I think this must make perfect sense to you. 😁

I really liked the city, has a small town feel to me. Quite nice indeed.

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There's an old and wise saying

Aaaaaaaheeeeeexactly! 😁😁😁

Also, when I was younger: "If no-one sees you break it, is it even broken?"

a small town feel to me

That must be because Tampere is such a tiny town. Half an hour and you've walked through the centre (east-west) and even less if you go south-north.

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There is a wise old saying:

Wise old sayings are wiser than some, and not as wise as others, but if someone thinks it's wise then it is, and if no then it is not, but a wise person takes a wise or not wise saying and finds something to take away, so they are wiser, but maybe not much older.

Tampere seems like a nice place to me, I'll be back one day. Dare I suggest a Hive meet up there? (I have a wise old saying for that actually.) Either way, there's some nice spots and I like it.

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Absolutely a Hive meeting when you come here! Most definitely!

And old sayings are one of my favourite things in the world. Just keep 'em coming. Or store them and when we meet, release them all at once. I bet the old sayings would like that. I mean, we could watch the sayings gallop wildly and happily in the streets of Tampere. Colliding strangers and giving them wise phrases without asking. That would be fun to see.

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Absolutely a Hive meeting when you come here! Most definitely!

Deal

Or store them and when we meet, release them all at once.

Might be a long meeting.

we could watch the sayings gallop wildly and happily in the streets of Tampere.

Tampere street-galloping is wise old sayings' most enjoyable activity.

It's happening.

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Two Euros? Nooooo, it is priceless. Especially after the great work you've done.

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Oh thank you! A great flea market find from a small town in northern Finland, all the way up in Lapland. I was on a short vacation there and looking for something to replace my digital camera, which I unfortunately forgot home and never thought that that camera would just be the opening of a rabbit hole that I would few years after fall in to. The huge rabbit hole of old film cameras.

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I think that film photography is kinda similar to the "slow food" concept. Phone photos are sometimes called "clicks" and that's exactly what they are. Cheap and worthless. Great Art is slow. Not necessary expensive though. 😃📸

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(Edited)

I agree with you.

With a digital camera you can get accurate photos of the reality immediately and the world is full of that kind of photos. I'm a little bit fed up with that because it's too easy and if I want the photos to be something else than pixel perfect representations of the reality, I need to do post processing and that sometimes bores me. Too many options and I can't decide. With an old camera and film, it takes away a huge amount of options and the fact that will the photo be a good one in my eyes is mostly left to chance since I lack photographing skills and the cameras are what they are, old, and all that fascinates me. Accidental art or art in co-operation with me and the camera. That is, if the film camera gods will it. 😁

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True, so true!

Let's put it that way, with the "modern" photography, sometimes it's all about clicking a shutter, and that shutter is more and more only a few pixels, a virtual button on a screen. Not that it's bad but our own "influence" over the final photo is less and less by the day.
Film photography "fixes" that problem. There are so many things we could do or not do that affect the end photo.
Probably that's the reason more and more people return to film, in full, from placing the film inside, the developing with prepping the solutions, etc. and transferring it to paper. And probably AI will help making non-digital art much more esteemed. The future will tell.

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If you believe all the likes that people generally give to photos in social media, you could say that photos that are post processed so that saturation is so much over that it hurts my eyes and extreme HDR toning used so that everything, white and black areas are revealed by the tiniest detail, then film photography (or any kind of genuinely beautiful art photography) has no chance to be valued also in public eyes. It'll remain a niche art form.

And probably AI will help making non-digital art much more esteemed.

I certainly hope so, although we haven't seen the total peak of AI art yet. My opinion is, rather gloomy one, that general opinion does not value that much the work behind the art. If an AI makes great art in the future, without any human touch, the general opinion might turn in to: "Who needs artists when we have AI?" and "New art can be generated so easily and is so much better that any human artist." The word better and the opinion of what is good art is of course debatable but again the work behind the AI code would be forgotten. By the masses.

But as I said, that's a rather gloomy opinion or prediction of the future, let's hope humanity generally will start valuing more the work behind any ready made product, art and film photography especially.

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Exactly! Very well said!

Perhaps at a certain point we, I mean people in general, will start to appreciate the time spent to create something. Useful or useless, beautiful or ugly, creative or destructive, these are all a matter of perspective.
The Future promises to be much more interesting, if we live up to see it.

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That is awesome! Personally, I have never tried to repair a camera - not only am I rather fat fingered with small details, I also do not have five hands (loved that, by the way) - but I think it's fantastic that you were able to do so. The pictures are superb, too, definitely making it all worthwhile. Great camera you've got!

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Thanks! The repairing of the Cosina did not go quite as I planned so I'm still thinking if you can call it repaired or not.

Accidental art was a success, this time. For the most part, because I only showed you the photos that I did like, of course.

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Well that's expected. Both film and digital photography will have those pictures that we want to discard. It's the ones that turn out great that make it worthwhile!

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