It includes shutter button accessories, which are cute, but you'll need your own adhesive since the built-in sticky backing isn't durable. The film is relatively cheap, which is good because you'll be using a lot of it! If your budget is extra tight, the Instax Mini 9 —our previous recommendation—is still a good cam, though it might not be that much cheaper.
The Instax Mini 40 falls somewhere between the Mini 90 and Mini It's a bit bigger than the Mini 90 and otherwise has the same features as the Mini 11, with the exception of its surprisingly good selfie mode.
Pull out the lens to swap into a focus designed especially for close-ups of your mug or a macro-y non-selfie. The pebbled feel and retro black-and-silver look may make this camera more appealing than the bright and bubbly Mini It's a good option for those who don't need all the bells and whistles of the Mini This Instax Mini-compatible cam is great on its own, taking sharp shots especially if you opt for the glass-lensed, wide-angle Magellan edition and including features many Fuji-made cameras omit.
Long exposures, multiple exposures, and some exposure compensation abilities let you further express yourself. Its reasonable price and easy-to-use design make it a great choice if you just gotta have the classic, aspect ratio, Polaroid-style shots you remember from days gone by and from Instagram.
The Instax SQ6 has plenty of modes, from basic to double exposure. If the idea of Instax Square has you intrigued but you find the above SQ6 a little From its unique folding design to its excellent, optional attachments and built-in infrared remote, it works to justify its higher price. And if you need to save a buck on film, an adapter lets you shoot cheaper and smaller Instax Minis instead of Instax Square.
It's competitively priced and easy to shoot with. A caveat: We've had some bad batches of film, and buyers have complained about this as well. The Lab makes Polaroid images from images on your phone. It takes a photo of your phone screen, so the better phone you have, the nicer the results.
What sets it apart is the smartphone companion app. As of press time, the app is not the best, but it does give you the option to use features like Tripod Mode, Manual Mode, or setting a custom f-stop in Aperture Priority Mode.
It's pricey, but it does offer a good blend of modern methods and vintage execution. Sure, it has the right features, but its huge, plasticky body isn't portable compared to a Polaroid-compatible shooter or an Instax Mini camera. Its biggest drawback is the viewfinder, which can make framing close-up shots challenging. But if you want to go wide and don't mind the bulk, it's decent. Fujifilm's Mini Link is close to our top pick, the LiPlay, but ditches the camera functionality.
Instead the Mini Link prints images from your phone. Fujifilm's new mobile app is much better than its past efforts. I'd recommend this over the older SP-2 printer for that reason alone, since the results are otherwise similar. What makes the new app more fun? Fun Modes. Party Print creates collages from multiple phones, while Match Test takes images of two people or two images of one person and prints a combined image. It'll also tell you how "compatible" it thinks the pair is, which is gimmicky, but what party doesn't lighten up with a little gimmickry?
More: Don't Forget the Film! The Instax Mini 11 is more affordable than our top pick, but still does a fantastic job at snapping and printing photos.
We love that it comes in exciting color options, including lilac purple, sky blue, ice white, charcoal gray, and blush pink. The camera requires two AA batteries. The pros outweigh the cons, though. The camera sports an optical viewfinder has automatic exposure, and includes a built-in flash for snapping photos at night. Another offering from Fujifilm, this option prints some of the best photos out of any film camera out there.
The Instax Wide produces photos that are 3. Prints come out crystal clear, but they still have that throwback retro feel to them that we love. Replacement film is readily available on Amazon for around a dollar per shot. The Instax Square SQ1 is compact, easy to hold, and has a nice little window on the bottom right that tells you how many exposures you have left.
We love its vintage aesthetic, accented perfectly by the color options of terracotta orange, glacier blue, and chalk white. Besides looking cool and eclectic, the SQ1 shoots square format shots and has an always-on flash. It offers enough battery life to snap shots before needing to be recharged and has a convenient selfie mirror. It's worth mentioning that it lacks a self-timer and doesn't support double exposure photography and landscape mode.
Automatic settings based on lighting and high-quality instant prints make this camera a great choice. You can shoot super close with the macro setting, capture light trails with a slow shutter speed, and produce two images overlapping on a single sheet of film with the double-exposure mode.
Plus, you can even get creative and shoot unique double- or long-exposure shots. If you want to save some dough, consider the analog Polaroid Now camera which doesn't have Bluetooth, but features a nifty autofocus. One of the appeals to an instant camera is how cool they look. If you only have a budget of just a hundred bucks but still want a unique-looking camera that works, opt for the Instax Mini It has an impressively convincing plastic faux leather body with metallic-like details.
Apart from its aperture and overall appearance, this option is almost identical to the Instax Mini 11 we previously mentioned. It has the same focal length, shutter speed, minimum focus distance, flash recycle time.
Kodak's Smile Classic camera improves upon other Zink cameras like the Polaroid Snap by producing larger prints that are more detailed and sharper than the rest. But Instax cameras — like our Best Overall pick — print faster, and in better quality.
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