Lomography Experimental Lens Kit Review

Lomography Experimental Lens Kit Verdict

To get the best out of these lenses, you would benefit from shooting with a fairly recent Micro Four Thirds camera, as noise performance at higher ISO settings is better, or alternatively use an Olympus or Panasonic camera with built in image stabilisation. However, you can also shoot with these lenses on older cameras too, and the lenses add the ability to shoot multiple exposure shots when your camera may not support it. 

As you can see from the images posted here, these lenses are not about image quality, and sharing these images at anything over 2 megapixels simply highlights the very low image quality these lenses produce. However, if you want to experiment with different lenses on your Micro Four Thirds camera, would like to try some filters and multi-exposure shooting, without having to spend a lot of money, then these are a great way to do it on a budget. The fact that you would need to spend a lot more for a fish-eye lens and a 12mm lens makes it quite an appealing package. The lenses are compact, lightweight, and easy to slip into a bag along with your other kit without adding much weight or bulk. 

Lomography Experimental Lens Kit Pros

Three lens kit
Filters provided
Multi-exposure possible
Compact and lightweight

Lomography Experimental Lens Kit Cons

f/8 aperture will limit usefulness in low-light 
Difficult to focus
Poor image quality
Not the best build quality

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