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Instax Mini 9- Just a Polaroid Camera?



https://youtu.be/GeJEd5DzC7s

The Mini 9 is really Small and light (so small and light that there’s not much to say) THIS ARTICLE IS ALSO REALLY SHORT AND LIGHT, it has a Positive exposure compensation and runs on AA batteries. It although doesn’t have any built-in close-up/selfie mode or cool creative modes.

The Mini 9 is the Firm’s most entry-level camera using the Mini format and is among the most affordable instant models available. It’s simple to operate and light on features. Awesome to take those old school and vintage looking images.

It is a bit chunkier than its other Instax Mini siblings. The body is built entirely of plastic, but seems well-constructed. The camera is powered by two AA batteries which should be enough juice for up to 100 shots (10 packs of Polaroids)

The shutter on the Mini 9 is fixed to 1/60 sec, and the flash always fires.

The Mini 9 is bundled with a close-up lens attachment for shots as near as 35 cm / 1.1 ft, The camera offers four shooting modes and indicates which it thinks is best by illuminating an orange LED next to the mode – It’s up to the user to dial in the appropriate mode. There’s no info LCD, but a small window on the back displays the number of shots left.

With a max range of 2.7 m / 8.8 ft, Exposure is controlled via the various shooting modes. There’s no true exposure compensation though. Focus is fixed on this camera, with an effective focus range of 0.6m / 2ft to infinity; however, we found shots taken at infinity tend to look a bit soft.

Overall, The Mini 9 is going to win over a lot of people thanks to its Pricing and Ease of Use. It’s an easy-to-use camera with a couple of tricks up its sleeve. It’s a good one.

Instax Mini 9- Just a Polaroid Camera?

Instax Mini 9- Just a Polaroid Camera?


https://youtu.be/GeJEd5DzC7s

The Mini 9 is really Small and light (so small and light that there’s not much to say) THIS ARTICLE IS ALSO REALLY SHORT AND LIGHT, it has a Positive exposure compensation and runs on AA batteries. It although doesn’t have any built-in close-up/selfie mode or cool creative modes.

The Mini 9 is the Firm’s most entry-level camera using the Mini format and is among the most affordable instant models available. It’s simple to operate and light on features. Awesome to take those old school and vintage looking images.

It is a bit chunkier than its other Instax Mini siblings. The body is built entirely of plastic, but seems well-constructed. The camera is powered by two AA batteries which should be enough juice for up to 100 shots (10 packs of Polaroids)

The shutter on the Mini 9 is fixed to 1/60 sec, and the flash always fires.

The Mini 9 is bundled with a close-up lens attachment for shots as near as 35 cm / 1.1 ft, The camera offers four shooting modes and indicates which it thinks is best by illuminating an orange LED next to the mode – It’s up to the user to dial in the appropriate mode. There’s no info LCD, but a small window on the back displays the number of shots left.

With a max range of 2.7 m / 8.8 ft, Exposure is controlled via the various shooting modes. There’s no true exposure compensation though. Focus is fixed on this camera, with an effective focus range of 0.6m / 2ft to infinity; however, we found shots taken at infinity tend to look a bit soft.

Overall, The Mini 9 is going to win over a lot of people thanks to its Pricing and Ease of Use. It’s an easy-to-use camera with a couple of tricks up its sleeve. It’s a good one.