
I like this picture because instead of going for the clarity and details like we usually do, it's more atmospheric. I'll try and take some more with some different lens/film combinations - in the meantime, anyone else using this app?





Nicely put! I think it's based off of an actual inexpensive camera they developed back in the '70s, if you believe the marketing.jps wrote:This is very cool, actually. Nice to see a trend towards retro looks that are not glamourized, so to speak.
Thanks for the heads-up Paul - looks like an interesting app. One thing I don't really like about the Hipstamatic is the "viewfinder" - it is not an accurate representation of what the camera is seeing, it only shows a portion. I guess it's supposed to be "retro" and all, but I kind of wish you could have a better idea of what you were taking a picture of.jingle_jangle wrote:Fun!
This was one of the very first apps I put on my iPhone after I read about it on Gizmodo.
There's a fun "photo lab" application that allows you to post-process any photo in your iPhone's photo library (including, of course, those taken with the Hipstamatic app). It's called Swanko Lab, and besides having amusing background sound effects, the results can be very entertaining and possibly useful.
The two photos below were transferred from my Sony digital camera to my iPhone so I could process them via Swanko Lab, then transferred to my laptop so I could post them here. Note that they were NOT taken with Hipstamatic, but the post-processing was via Swanko Lab.

You thought you should post a pic taken with a Canon in a thread about an iPhone app?hieronymous wrote:Thought I should post this pic here:

Not really, 'Lomography' referrs to pictures taken with a very specific small Russian camera, which has distinct traits like highly saturated colors, and shallow FOV, the center object is highlighted while the edges are darkened. There's a big difference between "old-timey" sepia toned images and Lomo.jps wrote:Lomo "style" covers a lot of ground.
