![]() ![]() Dimensions/Size: 11.5cm (H) x 12.5cm (W) x 4cm (D) Features. Featuring a fixed focus lens and press and hold flash button, its perfect for taking quality photos indoors or outside. Kassha is the Japanese word for the click sound of a camera shutter. Its also a great camera to give to guests at weddings and other events to help capture precious moments. The camera is a very simple disposable design, with a flash, a fixed focus 31mm f9/11 lens. The JCH StreetPan Kassha is a B&W disposable 27 shot camera loaded with JCH StreetPan 400 film. ![]() We’ve included some image below that show the good and the bad. And if you love JCH StreetPan then we highly recommend shooting it in manual control camera which will enable you to get better exposures. If you’re looking to shoot a B&W disposable camera we definitely recommend the Ilford & Lomography cameras over this one. ![]() It’s a sweet spot for focus and it’s fast is 3-5 feet. And on top of that, it’s 31mm lens doesn’t have a wide depth of field which produces blurry images from roughly 15ft to infinity (fixed focus 31mm lens). Even with the flash, it produced dark images on occasion. This film is known for its’ contrast and punchy tones that can look really good when properly exposed which is the major flaw with this camera… This camera has a fixed aperture of f/9 with a shutter around 125th of second which would be fine for daylight shooting but since this film seems to be darker/needs to be overexposed it produced many dark images. We were excited to shoot with the new Kassha disposable camera loaded with 27 exposure JCH StreetPan 400 film JCH is short for Japan Camera Hunter. If you’re in a situation that exposing the camera to wet environments, while the quality isn’t as good as the FujiFilm QuickSnap, consider the FujiFilm QuickSnap Waterproof Fuji also has the best selling waterproof disposable camera. If you’re looking for a cheap daylight camera that excels for landscapes this camera would be a great choice. Learn More More about the Kodak Fun Saver 35mm Single-Use Camera with Flash Charge manual flash before every picture, Available in 27 exposures, Lightweight and compact, Loaded with Kodak 800 speed The Kodak FunSaver is like all single-use cameras with a simple plastic lens, manual film advance, and 27 exposures. Its colors are nearly as pleasant as the rest – it often goes magenta for skin tones and whites. The QuickSnap is best used in open daylight with no flash or in low light with flash. Having a good flash is important for this camera because has finer grain 400 iso film which means need the flash for the lower lit scene, unlike the 800 iso cameras. All the other cameras we reviewed you need to press the button to charge the flash for every shot but this camera you can keep the flash constantly on by pushing the flash with up which will glow red when ready. It’s the smallest and has a practical flash switch that allows you to keep the flash on. Of all 8 of the disposable cameras we reviewed, the QuickSnap is the easiest to use. ![]()
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