Fujifilm X half – A few frames taken with a Camera From a World I Don’t Understand

By David Hume

This little thing is fun.

That’s the main takeaway — the key word that came up over and over again on a recent photo walk in my hometown of Adelaide, South Australia. The event was hosted by Ted’s Camera Stores and by Fujifilm, and five punters were given a Fuji X half for an hour to stroll the streets and take some photos, followed by an hour in a café over pizza and hot chocolate to warm up and talk cameras.

So – a bit of context about my images. Because it was a night walk and this little thing purported to have film sims I thought I’d see if I could bring a bit of a “Velvia at night” vibe, and hark back to a five frames I posted here in 2019. That was real Velvia 100 in a Nikon F4 and you can see those here.

I didn’t plan to write about the X half at the time, so I didn’t ask anyone’s permission to use identifiable photos — and I didn’t ask their ages or genders either — but my best guess is we were a fairly mixed group: three women in their late 20s to mid-30s, two guys (one 30ish, one around 60). There were also a couple of Ted’s staffers, a Fuji educator, and a social media person floating about. No one, I think, would be surprised that I’m writing this, or misrepresented by it. The tone of the walk was clear: this camera is about fun.

That’s really why I’m writing. I’d followed the launch of the Fuji X half, read the reviews, seen the hot takes. I’d watched the YouTube videos. And the internet has spoken. People are hammering the camera for its lack of features and high price — many of them, predictably, without ever having touched it.

But this is a camera that doesn’t make sense until you touch it. Until you shoot it. Until you’re in a social setting, passing it around, pointing it at something, or someone, and seeing what you get.

If you’re not into this camera — that’s fine. Walk away. But don’t form an opinion from the spec sheet. Use it. Or if you can’t, imagine for a moment that you’re not the intended audience. That’s what I had to do — and it’s what prompted me to write this.

Because even after using the camera, I don’t understand it. In fact, I think it comes from a place I can’t  understand. And I say that not as criticism but with genuine curiosity and humility. The Fuji X half, in my view, wasn’t made to impress the familiar demographic of camera enthusiasts — the Western, mostly middle-aged men who think their opinions are perhaps a little more valid than those with whom they disagree (of which, full disclosure, I am one). It feels like it’s from another cultural context entirely. Japan, obviously — and maybe South Korea. A place where visual culture is being created in ways that the old guard of photo culture doesn’t dictate anymore. Maybe it’s for the K-Pop generation. Maybe it’s for TikTok. Maybe it’s for a mode of visual communication that doesn’t care what aperture it’s shot at — or what that even means.

There are things about the camera that didn’t make sense to me. And that’s okay. Maybe that’s part of the point.

I could actually do a likes and dislikes about this camera, as I have some of each, but I figure as soon as I do that I’m negating my thesis that it’s not about the specs. No one talks about the handling of an Instamatic — they just use it to record moments, places, friends. And yes, you might ask, “But David, have you not heard of this newfangled thing called the smartphone?”

To which I reply: you weren’t paying attention. I said you need to use it before forming an opinion.

And that’s the most interesting thing I found about the Fuji X half camera — it was not any one feature or quirk, but the fact that it exists at all. That someone at Fujifilm — or some group of someones — greenlit the idea, shepherded it through the design and manufacturing process, and got it into the hands of people who are going to use it.

Whether it succeeds or fails in the market? I have no idea. But we’ll find out. And we’ll find out not by reading the comments section or arguing specs, but by seeing whether or not people are  carrying it around a year or so from now, pointing it at something that matters to them.

Share this post:

Find more similar content on 35mmc

Use the tags below to search for more posts on related topics:

Donate to the upkeep, or contribute to 35mmc for an ad-free experience.

There are two ways to contribute to 35mmc and experience it without the adverts:

Paid Subscription – £2.99 per month and you’ll never see an advert again! (Free 3-day trial).
If you think £2.99 a month is too little, then please subscribe and I can manually edit the subscription value for you – thank you very much in advance if this is what you would like to do!

Subscribe here.

Content contributor – become a part of the world’s biggest film and alternative photography community blog. All our Contributors have an ad-free experience for life.

Sign up here.

Make a donation – If you would simply like to support Hamish Gill and 35mmc financially, you can also do so via ko-fi

Donate to 35mmc here.

About The Author

By David Hume
David Hume is an Australian visual artist and photographer, best known for work depicting the Australian landscape. He also worked as a commercial editorial photographer for over 25 years, and has held a number of photographic exhibitions. He currently exhibits both painting and photography.
View Profile

Comments

Gary on Fujifilm X half – A few frames taken with a Camera From a World I Don’t Understand

Comment posted: 22/06/2025

"It ain't me, babe." But I'm too old, too Western, and too unhip to be among the target audience. Same with the Ricoh half-frame film camera.
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

thorsten on Fujifilm X half – A few frames taken with a Camera From a World I Don’t Understand

Comment posted: 22/06/2025

And fun is the selling point, isn't it dear David.
Your image up there reminded me a bit of Trent Parke, in the dark.
After testing the GFX100RF I skipped the Xhalb, but look forward to the X-E5 with the neat emulsionsimulationdial…
;))
/t
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

john on Fujifilm X half – A few frames taken with a Camera From a World I Don’t Understand

Comment posted: 22/06/2025

I just can't believe how bad the photos look from this camera, no shade to the author or any photographers using this camera, but on a basic technical level they just look TERRIBLE. Which is shocking coming from Fujifilm who's been spitting out some of the best OOC jpegs for more than a decade. I don't agree with their decision to not allow RAW recording but I sort of understand it, but I cannot understand just how objectively bad the jpegs this camera produces are. No matter the film simulation used they reek of bargain basement webcam sensor jammed in a plastic housing grocery checkout aisle level camera. Toy'r'us level camera. Baffling.
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

John Bennett on Fujifilm X half – A few frames taken with a Camera From a World I Don’t Understand

Comment posted: 22/06/2025

Fun is the whole point for most of us. Or it should be. Speaking for myself, of course. Never going to be famous. Never going to change the world (even the world of photography). Time is fleeting. Better have fun.

I bought a Pentax 17 (half frame film camera) almost a year ago.. I use it all the time. More often than some of my serious cameras. It’s so much fun. The new Fujifilm X Half is tempting for the same reason.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/johnandrewbennett/albums/72177720321723362/
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Ryan Gardiner Johnson on Fujifilm X half – A few frames taken with a Camera From a World I Don’t Understand

Comment posted: 22/06/2025

This is the first Fuji (Digital) camera I’ve been interested in! The interface seems interesting as well as film simulations, kinda dig the idea of vertical frames ala 645 series. Also like the idea you can hide the pics until ‘the roll‘ is finished…
Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *