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I already have a pinhole/body cap, have just ordered a genuine Holga lens for Nikon (for twenty bucks!), and a used Russian Helios 50mm/f2 for $30. This is a good start, but I bet we can do better! I'm thinking of making a lens out of a toilet paper tube (inside painted black) and something plastic/cheap. I thought of a magnifying glass, but that might only give me something like 8 inch focus (hey, a cheap macro!) Another thought was to pull the meniscus lens from one of my Brownies and mount that using black poster board and a toilet paper tube. (Roughly a 100mm lens.) So there you have it--cheap lenses, where the best quality is the Holga! Note: I am NOT looking for cheap lenses that perform well. I am looking for cheap lenses that barely perform! BeBu Lamar , Sep 29, 2016; How much is cheap? I got excellent lens like 100mm f/2.8 E for $5.Kent Staubus , Sep 29, 2016; OK, that's cheap, but is it crappy? I'm looking for cheap and crappy. Think: toilet paper tube with lens from a 1950s Brownie stuck on the end.

Kent in SDSandy Vongries , Sep 29, 2016; Timo uses an old projector lens -- junk shop? All sorts of junk lenses -- broken binoculars, rifle scopes, cheap magnifying glasses, old eyeglasses, even the bottoms of some drinking glasses might work. The old pre ai Nikon 43-86 is reasonably crappy (not the newest ones) -- often under $20 on line.Glen H , Sep 29, 2016; I think the cheapest that I bought is an AI 80-200 zoom for $10.50 at Goodwill. This is the one with push/pull zoom, but as far as I know it is a fine lens. I never bought a lensbaby, but I believe that they are supposed to be plastic lenses. If you go to goodwill, or similar store, you can find a supply of old cameras and parts for low prices. There are even some nice low quality 35mm cameras, such as one from Time magazine. You could buy some cheap camera, and take the lens out. The first camera I ever had, though didn't use it long, is an Imperial Delta using 127 film. It seems to have crappy film transport, with no smooth edges where along the film path.

Yes, I suppose that cheap plastic magnifiers are the way to go. Maybe one with a Fresnel lens that might not stay flat. The lensbaby Spark is designed to be sharp in the center, and blurry on the outside. Seems that it is a two elements in one group lens. It doesn't say much more that that. Might be interesting to compare to some of your other choices. James Elwing , Sep 29, 2016; What about a nice pre-set wide angle lens (35-28) in a T mount adaptor. Some of those can be pretty ordinary. I have an 8mm Hanimex fisheye; great but very ordinary. All really old & cheap fisheyes will probably be awful, if full frame fisheyes are not awful enough by themselves :-)todd goodheart , Sep 29, 2016; Consider looking for a really cheap, third party, way-off brand 28 mm lens, then mount it on an equally cheap, off brand 2x teleconverter. The 2x would magnify the shortcomings of the lens, and you'd also have a 56mm lens that could probably be focused down to 1 ft for crappy closeups.

It might not be a super cheap setup, costwise, but I think it could certainly meet your thresh hold for crappy image quality.Mike Gammill , Sep 29, 2016; During the 1980's some of the zooms offered by Samyang, Zykkor, and several others offered so-so performance, especially in the tele range at wide apertures. Some of them were branded as Sears lenses. Some of the early 28-80 and maybe 70-210-ish lenses might fit the bill. Some of them in Modern Photography tests were rated "unacceptable" for image quality in the extremes of focal length and wide apertures. The South Korean made 500 mm f 8 mirror lenses from the mid to late 80's were not good performers. Some of them were even branded by Vivitar. The two samples I tried never really reached a sharp focus at any distance.Marc Rochkind , Sep 29, 2016; I think the crappiest lens may have been the original 24-120 zoom. Which I have, but stopped using years ago. If you get one, on eBay, say, which won't cost you much, be careful of bait-and-switch.