Difference between revisions of "Vivitar XB100"

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(There are no photos of this camera on Flickr. There seems to be very few of these cameras left. Searching the internet, I found few references to it, outside of one being sold on Amazon)
 
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This camera offered all three APS film aspect ratios, is fixed-focus, has motor-driven film advance, a large viewfinder, a built-in flash, red eye reduction, and requires two AA batteries to operate.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/19980201170227/http://www.vivitar.com/APS.HTML Vivitar - Advanced Photo System, Archived 1 February 1998 by Wayback Machine] at the Internet Archive</ref>  
 
This camera offered all three APS film aspect ratios, is fixed-focus, has motor-driven film advance, a large viewfinder, a built-in flash, red eye reduction, and requires two AA batteries to operate.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/19980201170227/http://www.vivitar.com/APS.HTML Vivitar - Advanced Photo System, Archived 1 February 1998 by Wayback Machine] at the Internet Archive</ref>  
  
==References==
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==Notes==
 
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[[Category:APS]]
 
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[[Category:Vivitar]]
 
[[Category:Vivitar]]

Revision as of 05:55, 11 November 2018

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The Vivitar XB100 Big View is a late-1990s compact camera for the APS format that was popular around the time. Unfortunately, APS is currently (as of 2016) out of production (yet 110 film, the format it was intended to replace, remains in production), although old stock expired aps film is readily available and has been used for funky results.

This camera offered all three APS film aspect ratios, is fixed-focus, has motor-driven film advance, a large viewfinder, a built-in flash, red eye reduction, and requires two AA batteries to operate.[1]

Notes