As beautiful as they are functional, these handmade walnut and maple wooden cameras take 35mm and 120 roll film, and give you the classic pinhole effect of nearly infinite depth of field. The long exposure times required during shooting allow you to blur motion for interesting, creative effects. With diameters of just 0.20-0.3mm, the pinholes create effective apertures of f/125-f/133, and the wooden shutters can easily be moved in front and out of the way of the pinholes for exposure control. Lomo’s versatile ONDU 135 Panoramic can record standard 24 x 36mm or panoramic 24 x 72mm frames, and features a 25mm focal length for wide coverage. There is also a compact ONDU 135 Pocket model, which captures 24 x 36mm images and offers the same focal length.
As if the versatility of the 135 Pano wasn’t impressive enough, the ONDU 6 x 12 Multi-Format Camera has triple-format recording, with 6 x 6, 6 x 9, and 6 x 12 frames available—giving you a range of field of view choices from 90-117 degrees. It provides a 40mm lens, which is a little longer than that of the 135s but still features a wide perspective. For a smaller, single-format option, try the ONDU 6 x 9 Classic with the same focal length, or the 6 x 6 Pocket model with a 25mm lens.
These cameras are equipped with bubble levels and field-of-view indicators, enabling greater compositional accuracy. Each also has dual knobs for advancing and rewinding film, to capture creative multi-exposure shots or stitch frames together.
