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Digital Camera World
Digital Camera World
Matthew Richards

Ilford HP5 Plus B&W Single Use Camera: buy it, use it, mail it

Harman Ilford HP5 Plus B&W Single Use Camera.

I say this tongue in cheek but photography can be a chore. There’s all that faffing around with focusing, exposure settings, charging up batteries and loading memory cards or film. There’s none of that with this single use film camera. It comes preloaded with a roll of 27-exposure Ilford HP5 Plus black & white film, ISO 400, and a battery to power its flash. I found the hardest thing was getting the camera out of its retail carton, and that was very easy.

I like that there’s nothing to think about except taking photos. The camera has a fixed-focus lens with a natural focal length of 30mm and an aperture of f/9.5. The combination gives sufficient depth of field to retain sharpness from 1m to infinity. The shutter speed is also fixed at 1/100th of a second, so you’re relying on the latitude of the film to cover different lighting conditions. For shooting indoors or under low lighting, the built-in flash has a range of about 3m. All I have to do is press the shutter button to take a picture, then wind the crank to advance the film.

Specifications

Price & Availability

The camera is widely available around the world and, for the sake of comparison, we’ve seen it retailing for around $15 in the USA. It's either £15 or £34 in the UK. That’s quite a disparity. The difference is that the pricier version in the UK includes processing and comes complete with a mailing bag for sending to an Ilford lab.

I got the standard version of the camera, as shown here. The pricier version has a red star on the front of the box with ‘Process Paid’ printed on it. (Image credit: Matthew Richards)

Design & Handling

In typical single-use camera style, the film is fully wound out to the end of the roll when it is pre-installed in the camera. Each time you take a shot and wind the film on for the next frame, it winds back into the cassette. I find that quite handy as, if you shoot the whole reel, the film is already wound back into the cassette ready for development.

I feel that any single-use camera should be designed as a bit of fun, rather than a serious technical exercise. This one certainly keeps things simple, avoiding that relatively tricky business of loading the film in the first place. All you need to do is put your eye to the viewfinder, compose the shot, and press the button. Although the minimum distance for the fixed focus lens is stated as 1m, Harman recommends a shooting distance of 2m or 6ft for taking portraits.

The back of the retail box doubles up as a user guide, with basic instructions in various languages. (Image credit: Matthew Richards)

Once the shot is taken, I found the film advance wheel easy to use and it comes to a reassuring click, with an interlocking mechanism that avoids the risk of double-exposures or winding the film too far for the next frame.

For indoor shooting or when light is low, there’s a simple sliding switch to turn on the flash. I found a bit of forward planning necessary, as the flash circuitry takes about 15 seconds to charge up. As a single-use camera, you don’t need to extract the film when you’ve come to the end of the roll. I just dropped off the whole camera at my local processing lab, or you can mail it off in the post.

The back of the camera contains the viewfinder window, flash ready lamp, film advance winder and a handy cheat sheet of instructions. (Image credit: Matthew Richards)
The shutter button is on the top panel towards the right hand side, next to which is a frame number display which counts down from 27. (Image credit: Matthew Richards)
The camera contains a 30mm f/9.5 lens which gives a natural, fairly wide-angle perspective. (Image credit: Matthew Richards)

Photo Performance

I’m a big fan of Ilford HP5 Plus black & white film but, as expected, a cheap disposable camera doesn’t do it much justice. I took a range of test shots outdoors in wide-ranging lighting conditions, from direct sunlight to deep shade. I also took some indoor shots with and without flash. The film has a wide exposure latitude so, despite the camera having a fixed exposure setting of 1/100th of a second at f/9.5, I got acceptable results in all outdoor scenarios. However, indoor shots even under fairly bright ambient lighting were very underexposed, apart from short-range shots using the flash. The film has a pleasant grain that I like but the single-element lens lacks any real sharpness or bite.

Sample Images

This gallery of sample shots was taken in varying lighting conditions from bright direct sunlight to deep shade, as well as indoors with and without flash.

Direct sunlight (Image credit: Matthew Richards)
Direct sunlight (Image credit: Matthew Richards)
Direct sunlight (Image credit: Matthew Richards)
Direct sunlight (Image credit: Matthew Richards)
Shade (Image credit: Matthew Richards)
Shade (Image credit: Matthew Richards)
Indoor, bright ambient lighting, with flash (Image credit: Matthew Richards)
Indoor, bright ambient lighting, without flash (Image credit: Matthew Richards)

Verdict

For a single-use black & white film camera, the Harman has a very colorful finish. I like its simplicity and that, pre-loaded with film and a battery, I can use it straight out of the box. Ultimately, it’s a bit of fun and capable enough for happy snaps but image quality falls way short of what I’d expect from even a cheap mobile phone nowadays. The camera is more suitable if you’re trying to create an authentic snapshot look from many decades ago.

(Image credit: Matthew Richards)

Should you buy the Harman Black & White Single Use Camera?

✅ Buy this...

  • Pre-loaded with quality film
  • Built-in flash
  • Easy to use

🚫 Don't buy this...

  • Single-use plastic
  • Images lack sharpness
  • Pricey film processing

Alternatives

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