>>3312452>>3312448The one I bought is in pristine condition. It was mailed wrapped in some tissue-like cloth, inside a tiny yellow envelope, inside a small bubble-wrap-lined mailing envelope. No scratches, no fingerprints, nothing but a clean lens. It was thicker than I'd imagined for the price of $4.50 ($6 for shipping).
>So if I use this, I am only able to take a photo at a low permanent aperture (f/2-1.2) and focus(not sure how far its focus).These are strictly bare lenses, unless you happen to order something like what you see on the front page. Then it will have a photo. These need everything added to take photos with; barrel, camera mount, focusing mechanism, aperture, the works. You can do what I did and epoxy it into a hole in a camera body cap, and put it on a macro bellows. Just make sure the lens focal length is as long as the macro bellows when it is at its shortest. Actually make it like 1-2mm longer so you know you are getting infinity focus. Then I make a paper aperture for like F/8 and a lens hood. I get pics like this with a single element lens. Like I did with the one photos (take out of an old Kodak Slide Projector)
This one is:
Lens Diameter: 34mm
Focal Length: 85mm
F-stop: f/2.5 (no aperture; f/8.333... with paper aperture)
>Lens hood not pictured yet>>3312502>>3312524>>3312525>>3312527https://www.lomography.com/magazine/18696-polaroid-super-shooter-plus-instant-gratificationGood info on that for you. Seems like 8x10 will be short range only with that lens since it is for 3.25×4.25inch originally. Still, it can be a good lens for your stuff anyway since you'd want a few lenses to do different things.