• Members 21 posts
    April 13, 2023, 4:09 p.m.

    I sold this battered Canon Ixus 870 IS for £94.00, I auctioned it with loads of photos starting at 99p and it had 43 bids !!!!!, I sold it because my smartphone does a better job and it wasnt getting used, they fetch good money...why ?? I bought it in 2010 for £120, I am very surprised by the demand

    IMG20230413140609.jpg

    IMG20230413140609.jpg

    JPG, 271.5 KB, uploaded by Vaughanb on April 13, 2023.

  • Members 90 posts
    April 13, 2023, 4:13 p.m.

    I think I have heard from news that there was a trend for teens to take photos with "vintage" digital cameras like this and post to Instagram just a while ago.

  • Members 21 posts
    April 13, 2023, 4:38 p.m.

    There is clearly a demand no doubt, another thing that is fetching good money now is 1980s and 1990s steel framed mountain bikes

  • Members 360 posts
    April 13, 2023, 4:56 p.m.

    Bhaha!
    I was searching for lenses for my newly acquired M6 II, and thought "what if I also threw in some old Powershot" for the magic of the old times into the mix? Daaaum! Old gear priced between $120-$400. Crazy! There definitely is some demand for that. Even M6,M50,SL1 and others are very well within that price range. It surprised me a lot.

  • Members 75 posts
    April 13, 2023, 5:50 p.m.

    Using old point & shoots has become a trend among Instagrammers and TikTok'ers. The New York Times ran a short story on this a couple? of months back.

    Another, more recent, story from PetaPixel:
    Gen Z Discovers Modern Digital Cameras are Better Than iPhones

  • Members 3 posts
    April 14, 2023, 8:34 p.m.

    The Canon ixus 800 is the camera that got me into photography many years ago. I lost it on holiday one time and ended up using a series of poor compacts and mobile phones until i found m43. Since moved through sony/fuji apsc and on sony fullframe. Why do i tell you this? Well its because these old compacts made great photos and still do, some people cant tell if i shot an image on a fullframe or a compact :) i have photos from these cameras that i would never have ever got with my fullframe or other cameras/smart phones.
    Whilst technically on paper they are not as good they have loads of character and a look that sterile smart phones just cant achieve.
    Lots of reasons to still use them. Small, light, cheap. Good optical zooms, nice color. Great to hand out at parties or family/children to take photos, your not going to do that with your expensive smart phone... take them on boats/canoes/climbing or other risky things where you might not risk your mobile. Even take them swimming with a waterproof case. I know you can get them for phones as well but people tend not to due to risk. Once you drowned your phone, you wont do it twice :) Old compacts have great auto modes, flashes, generally expose very well with great color and also have good macro/closeup ability. And most of all they are just fun to use and the images dont look like a smart phone. You can also use third party tools like CHDK to enable raw so you can process them in other tools if you want.
    Also the sooc jpegs can be improved if needed with tools like topaz noise, sharp, photo AI. They work well.
    These days ive still got a Canon G15 and a canon ixus 980 IS. Both great cameras and id pickup an ixus 800 is if i ever came across one cheap enough.
    Selling an old quality campact camera is like selling a film Ricoh GR1s, Contax t3 or Nikon 35 Ti for <£100. You wont be able to find these cameras in the next years and prices will rise no matter how many megapixels your smart phones on.