Newly-Launched Digital Camera is Controlled by Pretend Rolls of Film

Yashica Camera Y35

Japanese camera brand Yashica was first established in 1949, but they've “been silent” in the industry for more than 10 years. To mark the occasion of their grand return, they’ve announced their newest product—a Yashica digital camera called the Y35. Although its technology is squarely in the future, the company hasn't forgotten the joy that comes from shooting with film. They're now using digiFilm, which is inserted into the camera like an actual “roll” of film that controls how the pictures look.

The size and feel of the Y35 is modeled after a previous Yashica camera, the Electro 35. It has the same compact body and no LCD display screen on the back—a fact that presents a unique digital device experience.

So, what does that mean for picture taking? To use the Y35, you’ll have to carry the digiFilm with you. Each digiFilm canister isn’t film, but a series of saved picture settings that alter aspect ratios, graininess of the image, and more. (Thus replacing the settings menu on a standard digital camera.) There are four different digiFilm rolls currently available: ISO 1600 high speed; ISO 400 black and white; ISO 200 for standard color photos; and 120 Format that’s made with Instagram in mind. All images are stored off the digiFilm and on an SD memory card.

The Y35 comes with other quirks that challenge the conventions of digital cameras. One feature, for instance, requires you to “advance the film” using the lever located near the shutter. And because the device lacks an LCD screen, there’s no way to review your photos after you take them. But the company doesn’t see this as a downside; to them, it forces you to be more considerate of what you snap.

“Using Yashica Y35 is a journey to the truth—there is no instant gratification of a review screen, no delete button, and no hiding from mistakes,” the company writes. “The world seen from the viewfinder of Y35, might be a little slower, a little prettier, transporting us back to a time when we all pay a little bit more attention, and causing us to care each shot before clicking the shutter—because it must solid the first time or the moment is lost.”

If you’re interested in this approach to digital pictures, Yashica is now pre-selling the Y35 through a Kickstarter campaign.

The newest Yashica camera combines the joy of analog photography with the ease of digital technology.

Yashica Camera Y35

Devoid of an LCD screen (and therefore menu), the settings of a picture are controlled by “rolls” of digiFilm.

Yashica Digital Camera Y35

Yashica Camera

To take a picture, insert the type of film you'd like to use…

Yashica Digital Camera Y35

Yashica Digital Camera Y35

… and “advance” the film using the lever near the shutter.

Yashica Camera Y35

Yashica Digital Camera Y35

Here are some sample photos with their corresponding digiFilm rolls:

Yashica Camera Y35

Yashica Camera Y35

Yashica Camera

Yashica Camera

Learn more about the Yashica Y35 camera in the Kickstarter video below.

Yashica: Website | Kickstarter | Instagram | Facebook
h/t:[PetaPixel]

All images via Yashica.

Related Articles:

Designer Builds Polaroid Camera That Snaps and Prints GIFs Instead of Photos

Photographer Challenges Himself to Shoot Fantastic Photos with a $1 Camera

Kodak Revamps the Retro Super 8 Film Camera for the Digital Generation

Introducing the World’s First Folding Camera Made Entirely Out of Cardboard

Sara Barnes

Sara Barnes is a Staff Editor at My Modern Met, Manager of My Modern Met Store, and co-host of the My Modern Met Top Artist Podcast. As an illustrator and writer living in Seattle, she chronicles illustration, embroidery, and beyond through her blog Brown Paper Bag and Instagram @brwnpaperbag. She wrote a book about embroidery artist Sarah K. Benning titled 'Embroidered Life' that was published by Chronicle Books in 2019. Sara is a graduate of the Maryland Institute College of Art. She earned her BFA in Illustration in 2008 and MFA in Illustration Practice in 2013.
Become a
My Modern Met Member
As a member, you'll join us in our effort to support the arts.
Become a Member
Explore member benefits

Sponsored Content