Just Shoot Me
- Share via
Lomographers shoot from the hip. Or out the car window. Or between their legs. They never say, “Say, ‘cheese.’ ”
That’s partly because they can barely see through the viewfinders of their funny little Russian-made Lomo cameras. And partly because of the marketing savvy of Austrians Matthias Fiegl and Wolfgang Stranzinger. They shrank the Lomo’s original title (Leningradskoje Optiko Mechanit-scheskoje Objedinienie) and trumpeted the easy “Lomo lifestyle.”
Young Europeans grooved on the way the palm-sized 35mm with an automatic light meter and no auto focus or flash turned nothing snaps into off-kilter slices of life in eye-popping colors. The Lomo lens lets you shoot without a moment’s thought, at moments when you might not be up to thinking.
You don’t just buy a Lomo; you can be an official Lomographer. Membership ($185) includes the camera, a few rolls of film and a little book illustrating the strangely familiar: somebody’s dog, a pair of slippers, hands on a guitar neck.
“We’ve gone through about 100 since a week ago,” says Steven Trussell, owner of Naked, the only West Coast outlet for the new toy. Who buys it? “Anyone who likes to use a camera as a paintbrush.”
*
Naked, 181 N. Martel Ave., West Hollywood; (323) 964-0222.
Sign up for The Wild
We’ll help you find the best places to hike, bike and run, as well as the perfect silent spots for meditation and yoga.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.