Instant photography has never been more fun with this antidote to the Instagram era.
I HAVE AN affinity for the tangible that probably betrays my age more than anything, but nowhere does this hit me as hard as in photography. I love photo prints. I love photo books. I love instant images like Fujifilm’s Instax prints. Thank goodness for Fujifilm, which stepped in to save instant film when Polaroid dropped the ball at the beginning of the digital era.
Since then, Fujifilm has turned out an array of Instax cameras and printers and I have been a sucker for nearly all of them. I still have the original SP-2 and SP-3 printers and use them all the time. The company’s latest effort in this realm is the Instax Mini 12, which is the latest version of what I’d call the cheapest fun camera you can buy. It’s an adorable little bubble of plastic and is the best way to get started with Instax.
The Mini 12 replaces the Mini 11 and changes a couple of small things that turn out to be quite a big deal. The first is that Fujifilm has made parallax correction work in close-up mode (enabled by twisting the lens to close up). That correction means you don’t have to guess where the center of the frame is for close-up subjects. What you see is what you get now, eliminating those terrible, ill-framed close-ups that sometimes happened with the Mini 11.
I also really like the new twist lens. This is both how you get into the close-up mode, and how you turn the camera on. I’ll confess I had to consult the manual the first time to figure this out (after pressing the shutter button a dozen different ways), but once the dim little light bulb in my brain started working again, I came to appreciate a design that makes it virtually impossible to turn this thing on by accident.
Other upgrades include a new automatic flash control that detects brightness levels and only fires when needed. That’s a step up from the Mini 11, which fires the flash for every photo. That said, the Mini 12 fired the flash far more than I would have liked, but perhaps my dream of a good low-light Instax camera is just that. Whatever the case, the Mini 12 is certainly an improvement when it comes to flash handling.
Some things remain the same. The lens is still a 2-element plastic lens (60-mm f/12 equivalent). There is no focusing. Everything is auto-exposure. If this camera had a motto it would be: Keep it simple. There’s also still the little mirror on the front for framing your selfies.