Heidenfest 2026 at KK Mills, Wolverhampton.
It’s been 20 or so years since we last saw Korpiklaani. And it was well worth the wait. Excellent Finnish Folk Metal.
The guy on the button accordion was awesome. The thing was a beast, with hundreds of buttons.

5 bands across the evening. Terrific event if you are into what can loosely be called folk metal.
It now heads back to Europe, so catch it if you’re interested in that sort of thing.

Photo taken with my little Nikon Coolpix circa 2015. Shutter priority at 1/60th sec, F3.5 and the camera decided on the ISO.
I think it came out well. Pity I wasn’t closer to the stage.

#photography #livemusic #digicamlove #digicam #coolpix

My last #digicam acquisition is this very pocketable guy: Olympus D-435 (or C-180).

From 2005.
5.1 megapixels.
CCD sensor.
ISO range: 50-250.
Lens: 35mm (equiv.) ƒ2.8

I’m always intrigued by vintage digital cameras that came with fixed lenses instead of zooms, and it's too bad there are so few of them.

I need to take some more test photos in better conditions, because what I took so far looks average. But I really love the exaggerated bloom and halation. A nice effect when well-exploited.

Hey #believeinfilm friends,

I reviewed a digicam. It's not the same as film, of course, but this one in particular caught my eye for its ridiculous design, waterproof/shockproof qualities and a very special way its lens and sensor distort the image:

https://www.analog.cafe/r/nikon-coolpix-s31-waterproof-digicam-review-qx19

Nikon Coolpix S31 (Released in 2013)

#photography #digicam #retro #nikon

Lens-Artists Challenge #383: Looking Back To Challenge #174 – Shapes and Designs

This week it’s Tina’s turn to host the Challenge, and her theme is another ‘looking back’ challenge, where the host revisits the subject of a previous Challenge. On her blog, Travels and Trifles, Tina writes: ‘This week we look back to 2021 when our Lens-Artists Challenge #174 focused on Shapes and Designs.’ Back in 2021, Patti, who hosted the Challenge that week, invited us, ‘to share images that feature shapes and designs. Have fun searching for them in nature, in your home, in architecture, in food, in textiles, on the street–and just about everywhere else.’

For pretty much all of January, and forecast for at least the first half of February, Portugal has been battered with rain. So it’s no surprise that I’ve not been out much. That’s not to say I haven’t been busy, my mind is always trying to come up with things to do when the weather improves, and one of those things is circuit bending. This is something I’ve been keen to do for a long time, but what’s always scared me off is the possibility that I might break a camera.

Circuit bending is exactly as it sounds, taking a camera and deliberately introducing changes to the circuitry in the device that corrupts the image that the camera ‘sees’. Sometimes this can be quite extreme, with wires soldered into the circuit board connected to knobs and switches that can create all kinds of variations within an image. This requires a fair bit of skill with electronics, which I definitely don’t have, so I’ve taken what I called the ‘bull in a china shop’ approach and chose the simplest form of circuit bending: jamming metal foil into the ribbon wire connecting the sensor to the main board within the camera. 

Because I become far too attached to the digital cameras that I get especially for circuit bending, even those digicams from CEX for a few Euros, I decided to use the G6 Thumb Camera from AliExpress. If you are not aware, the G6 Thumb Camera is a cheap knock off of the hottest camera of the season, the Kodak Charmera. Like the Charmera, the G6 has a resolution of 1—2MP and has few other features than that. It is cheap though, at around 10—15€, and if broken, will not be missed.

So what I did was cut a thin piece of metal foil from a Ferrero Rocher chocolate and insert it alongside the ribbon wire in the G6s main board. When I turn on the camera, the image on the screen and the photographs are beautifully corrupted, with unusual colour shifts and patterns. As the weather has been so awful, I wandered around the house with the circuit bent G6 snapping as many patterns and designs as I could find.

Themes for the Lens-Artists Challenge are posted each Saturday at 12:00 noon EST (which is 4pm, GMT) and anyone who wants to take part can post their images during the following week. If you want to know more about the Challenge, details can be found here, and entries can be found on the WordPress reader using the tag ‘Lens-Artists’.

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#Abstract #Challenge #CircuitBending #Digicam #Experimental #Glitch #GlitchArt #Glitchy #LensArtists #LoFi #ShapesAndDesigns #ToyCamera #LensArtists

Live Music.
A photo from Friday night.
The genre? Folk rock cum indie folk and very political. Plus some trad Irish music in there too.

Photo taken with a Nikon Coolpix P310, handheld in quite a dark room. Camera set to shutter priority at 1/60th second. The camera figured out the rest.

The image has been breathed upon in Snapseed, just to lift the light levels and reveal a bit more detail.
I think the straight from camera image was a little too dark and moody. The camera settings were still left on outdoors, high contrast B&W and I overlooked this, forgetting to adjust.
And no, RAW was not an option.

#photography #monochromephotography #blackandwhitephotography #digicamlove #digicam #coolpix #nikoncoolpix

The Highs And Lows Of Circuit Bending A G6 Thumb Camera

This year (2026) has not got off to a good start, photographically speaking. For a start, the weather has been atrocious. We’re in the middle of what is being called on the news, a ‘comboio de tempestades’ (train of storms, with Ingrid on her way out and Storm Josef following quickly behind. Now storm Kristin is upon us, with 140km/h winds, and destruction across much of Portugal, and storm Leopoldo is due any day now. I suppose I could be going out in the gaps between the rainstorms, but it’s been quite miserable and unpredictable, and if there’s anything worse than me getting wet, it’s my precious cameras getting wet.

The second thing is a slight loss of ‘mojo’, which I’ve mentioned before. I bought a few Kodak Charmeras to play with, including one to make full-spectrum. That didn’t go well, and I ended up bricking one, which affected me more than I would have thought. I’m determined to get myself out of this ‘funk’, though, and I have a plan that I hope might help. For ages now, I’ve been talking about circuit bending a digital camera. I keep getting cheap cameras from CEX, but I always end up becoming too attached to them to tear one up. Then Kodak released the Charmera and I got one of those to circuit bend, but it still seemed a little too much, especially after bricking the full-spectrum one. And then AliExpress came to my rescue. They released a Charmera clone, the G6 Thumb Camera.

For about 14€, I can get a camera that looks like the Kodak Charmera but at less than half the price. Indeed, I can get two G6s for less than the price of one Charmera. So I did. I’m not going to go too much into the details of the G6, there are plenty of reviews available, except to say that the G6 is inferior to the Charmera, yet at the same time better. For example, it powers up quickly and goes straight to the picture taking menu, instead of having to select the photo option first. The G6 claims to have up to 12MP resolution, but I reckon that most of that is interpolation. From what I gather, the best resolution can be obtained at 1—2MP resolution, so the G6 probably has the same resolution of the Kodak Charmera, or 1.6MP.

A very muddy image from the G6 Thumb Camera. That it was a dull day, didn’t help.

Like the Charmera, the G6 Thumb Camera is easy to open up. The advantage of the G6 is that when you peel off the front cover, the lens assembly and sensor is directly in front of you, instead of having to unscrew and remove the main board within the camera, like on the Charmera. There’s a short ribbon wire connecting the sensor to the main board, and unclipping that the whole lens assembly just pops out. It’s time to start circuit bending. The simplest way to circuit bend a camera is to short out the contacts on the ribbon wire connecting the sensor to the main board of the camera.

There are many ways to go about this, but the simplest is to insert a small wire, or in my case a piece of tin foil, between the connectors on the ribbon wire. It’s at this point that I should come clean. My first attempt, with the red G6, did not go well. I removed the front cover and popped out the lens assembly quite easily, but when I tried to reinsert the ribbon wire with the tin foil behind it I encountered all sorts of difficulties. I succeeded in getting a nice circuit bent result for a few seconds, and then the camera just turned off. When I tried to turn it on again, the ‘Welcome’ screen loaded and the camera just froze. It’s at this point that I nearly gave up.

The ‘circuit bent’ G8 Thumb Camera. The camera is stuck on the Welcome screen.The ‘circuit bent’ G6 camera. It’s stuck.

I put everything away for the evening and looked on AliExpress for a replacement G6. I still had one remaining, but I wanted to keep that intact for messing around with. But then I realised that I already have the Charmera, and the quality of the G6 photos outside of the line tool filter is quite abysmal compared to the Charmera so I’m hardly likely to use it much. So why not try and circuit bend the other one, too? I’d also realised that my failure with the first G6 was that I’d probably created a short with the main board with the foil flapping around inside the camera (this might have been incorrect, but I wasn’t too know that at the time), so what I could do was to tape the foil to the bottom of the lens assembly, so that when I replaced the ribbon wire into its connector the foil was securely held in place.

The next day I prepared all of the bits and pieces alongside the black G6 Thumb Camera. Before I started, I removed the microSD card, just in case this might cause an issue. I then peeled the front off of the camera to reveal the lens assembly and sensor, and took off the tape covering the connector. I kept this to replace later. I undid the ribbon connector and pulled out the lens assembly. I cut a small piece of metal foil from the wrapping of the Ferrero Rocher (my better half ate the chocolate as I don’t touch the stuff) and fixed it to a small piece of electrical tape. I then fixed the tape to the bottom of the lens assembly. It was a bit fiddly, but I reinserted the lens assembly to the camera and turned it on. Up popped the ‘Welcome’ screen, and then the camera froze again. Just like the first one. I was crushed.

The ribbon connector of the G6 Thumb Camera. Note the two little things just above the connector.

I unplugged and removed the lens assembly and tried to turn the G6 off. This time it powered down with its cheery ‘Goodbye’ message, which was encouraging. I looked around for anything that might have caused this to happen and noticed two little pins just above the ribbon wire connector protruding through the board. I wondered if this might be the problem, so cut a very fine piece of foil and fixed it to the ribbon wire so that the foil did not come into contact with the pins. Again, it was a bit fiddly to get the ribbon wire into position, but eventually it was in and fixed into place. I reinstalled the microSD card, powered the G6 on, the ‘Welcome’ screen appeared and then the LCD displayed the most wonderful glitched image. I snapped a couple of glitchy images, then powered off the G6. I replaced the tape covering the ribbon connector and clicked the front cover back into place.

My first glitchy image wit the G6 Thumb Camera. It’s the floot.

Filled with excitement, I was so happy that this time the circuit bending had worked, I took the G6 across the road for some images of my favourite tree and well. In addition to ‘normal’ colour images, which were now wonderfully psychedelic, I cycled through the different filters. A lot of the monochrome filters looked just like black and white, but it will be interested to see how they appear when making trichromes or checking the infrared response, but the weather will have to improve tremendously for that. The line effect filter looked the same as before the circuit bending, although I think the colour scheme is different.

All in all, I was delighted with my first real attempt at circuit bending. Well, second if you include my failure the day before. In fact, although I thought I had lost that camera, I thought it might be worth seeing if I could get it going again. The battery was completely run down, so I removed the lens assembly, charged it up again and powered it on and off. It worked. I reconnected the lens assembly, put the front of the camera back on, and powered up the G6. The ‘Welcome’ screen came on, and it froze. This time, I wondered if pressing the reset button might do the trick. And it did! I powered on the G6, and the next thing I had an image on the LCD screen. I took a couple of random images, them powered down the G6. ‘Goodbye’, it said. I had a fully functional G6 again. I was so happy. 

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#CharmeraClone #CircuitBending #Digicam #Experimental #G6 #Glitch #GlitchArt #Glitchy #LoFi #Retro #ToyCamera

Today’s retro shooter was the Nikon Coolpix 3500.

From 2002.
3.2 megapixels.
CCD sensor.
ISO range: 100-400
Lens: Zoom Nikkor 37-111mm (equiv.) ƒ2.7-4.8

#digicam #nikon