Lomo LC-A
LOMO LC-A camera | |
| Overview | |
|---|---|
| Type | Compact, point and shoot |
| Released | 1984 |
| Lens | |
| Lens | Fixed, Minitar 1 32mm f/2.8 |
| Sensor/medium | |
| Film format | 35mm (135) |
| Film size | 36mm x 24mm |
| Film speed | 25-400 |
| Film advance | Manual |
| Film rewind | Manual |
| Focusing | |
| Focus modes | Manual, zone focus (0.8m, 1.5m, 3m, ) |
| Exposure/metering | |
| Exposure modes | Programmed auto, manual with fixed shutter speed |
| Exposure metering | Cadmium Sulphide (CdS light meter |
| Flash | |
| Flash | Hot shoe only |
| Flash synchronization | 1/60s; rear sync. only |
| Shutter | |
| Shutter | Electronically controlled |
| Shutter speed range | 2m to 1/500s |
| General | |
| Battery | Three S76 |
| Dimensions | 107 x 68 x 43.5 mm |
| Weight | 250g |
The LOMO LC-A (Lomo Kompakt Automat) is a fixed lens, 35 mm film, leaf shutter, zone focus, and compact camera introduced in 1984. Its design is based on the Cosina CX-2, with the difference being that it lacks a swiveling front and self-timer. It was built in Soviet-era Leningrad by Leningrad Optics and Mechanics Association (LOMO).
Production of the camera ceased in 1994. In the mid-1990s, a group of enthusiasts from Vienna persuaded LOMO to restart production, which continued until 2005, and they formed the Lomographic Society International, distributing these cameras around the world.
The LOMO LC-A's replacement, the LC-A+, was introduced in 2006 and production moved to China. The LC-A+ featured the original LC-A Minitar-1 glass lens manufactured by LOMO in Russia. This changed in 2007 and lenses on subsequent models have been made in China. Some LC-As were sold badged as Zenith, this label was only a sticker underneath the lens. Zenit (Zenith in some countries) is a trademark of KMZ (Krasnogorsk Mechanical Works).
Austrian company Lomography now offers three versions of the LC-A, the LC-A+ and LC-Wide in 35 mm format and the LC-A 120 in medium format.