Introduction
In my home, some cameras are reviewed, some are revered and some are simply used as tools. And then, there are just a very few cameras that quietly become part of the family memory.

When I first brought Lynn out with the Leica Sofort 2 a year ago (article here) , the idea was simple enough: give her a camera, let her photograph whatever caught her eye, and then print her favourite images when we got home.
No pressure, no technical lecture, no adult over-explaining the triangle of ISO, aperture and shutter speed until all joy evaporates.

The specifications of the Sofort 2 are nothing much to shout at, and it is more of the experience of using one that matters.
Technicalities
- A hybrid instant camera with print function
- 1/5-inch CMOS sensor at 2560 x 1920 Pixels (4.9 Megapixels)
- Leica Summar 2.4mm ƒ2 lens (approximately 28 mm equivalent)
- A 3-inch, approximately 460k dot TFT LCD
- ISO 100 to ISO 1600 (automatic) & 1/4 – 1/8000s Shutter speeds (automatic)
- Internal memory capable of storing around 45 images, with Micro-SD card support
- Focusing range from 10 cm to infinity, with auto-focus
- Dimensions of 23 X 86 X 44 mm at approximately 320 grams
- 10 film styles, 10 film effects which can be combined – giving 100 possible combinations
- Prints on Leica Instant Prints and Fujifilm Instax Mini

Just a child, a simple camera, and permission to notice.
That first photowalk was at a more rustic corner of Punggol, and what struck me then was not whether the Leica Sofort 2 was the “best” instant camera in any measurable sense. It was how quickly Lynn understood the point of it. The Sofort 2 made photography feel immediate and playful, yet just tactile enough to become memorable.

And because she enjoyed it so much, there was only one logical thing to do.
We went for a second photowalk, this time exploring the areas we didn’t to the last time.



Returning with the Sofort 2, but with more confidence
Compared to the first walk, Lynn was different this time.
Not drastically, of course. She was still very much Lynn, wandering ahead, stopping suddenly, pointing at something I did not notice, and occasionally asking whether a photo was “nice enough” to print later.
But there was now less hesitation and more confidence.

During the first walk, the Leica Sofort 2 was still something she was getting used to. The shutter, the screen, the small delay between seeing and pressing, the idea that one could select images to print rather than print every single frame automatically. There was still the shyness of a young photographer learning the rhythm of a camera.
This second time, she carried it with a little more ownership.

She knew how to turn it on, frame the scene and review her photographs.
She knew she could try again if the first frame did not quite work.
She knew, most importantly, that photography was not about getting permission from me before pressing the shutter.
In fact, today she started tinkering around the film styles and film effects in a more delibrate manner.

And that, to me, is where the Leica Sofort 2 begins to make sense.
It is not a camera designed to impress the pixel-peeping crowd. It is not about dynamic range, resolving power, pixel-level comparisons, or whether the corner sharpness holds up at 200% magnification.

The Sofort 2 works because it lowers the seriousness of photography without removing the magic of it.
Coney Island turned out to be a lovely setting for a second Sofort 2 walk.
There is something wonderfully unpolished about the place. The paths are not overly manicured, the trees lean into the frame in unexpected ways, and the light changes constantly as one moves between shade, sand, greenery and open sky.
For an adult photographer, these are visual opportunities. For a child, they are invitations to see the world with a bit more focus.

Lynn photographed leaves, branches, warning signs, bicycles, shadows, small details on the ground, and the occasional scene simply because “it looked nice”. And I loved that.

As adults, we often photograph with too much baggage. We think about composition rules, lens choices, rendering, the internet’s opinion, and whether a photograph is worthy of being shown. Children, at least before we over-teach them, photograph more honestly. They respond first.
The Sofort 2 suits this instinct well.
Its screen makes it familiar to a child raised in a digital world, while the instant-printing side gives the process a physical ending. A photograph does not simply vanish into a phone gallery with 4,000 other images. It can become a small print, held, arranged, kept, gifted, or stuck somewhere with too much tape.

An intuitive small camera that encourages noticing
One of my favourite things about watching Lynn photograph is seeing what she notices.
At Coney Island, she was not trying to create “content”. She was not thinking about whether a frame would perform well online. She was not chasing bokeh, sharpness, compression, cinematic rendering, or any of the wonderful discussions that we adults love.
She photographed because something made her stop.

And perhaps this is the real gift of giving a child a camera.
It is not to train them to become a photographer. It is to let them realise that the world is worth paying attention to.
The Leica Sofort 2 does this very gently. It does not force photography into becoming a lesson. It makes the act of seeing feel like play, and sometimes that is the best way to begin.



The photographs feel more assured now
Looking through Lynn’s photographs from this second walk, I noticed something quite touching.
The frames were still very much hers, but they had become more deliberate.

There were fewer random shots. More considered ones. She was beginning to understand distance, framing, and the simple idea that moving a little closer or stepping slightly to the side changes the photograph.
Some photographs had that slightly imperfect Sofort charm: gentle colours, modest detail, and a kind of casual softness that feels appropriate for memory rather than documentation. These are not files meant to be interrogated on a calibrated monitor. They are small visual notes from an afternoon.
Conclusions
Our second Leica Sofort 2 photowalk at Coney Island reminded me that sometimes, the best camera is the one that makes someone want to go out again.

The Leica Sofort 2 did that for Lynn. After the first photowalk, she wanted another. And during this second walk, I saw a young photographer becoming a little more confident, a little more observant, and a little more comfortable with the idea that her way of seeing is worth preserving.
That, to me, is worth far more than a specification sheet.
Thank you for reading.
Disclaimers:
- All product photos and samples here were photographed by Lynn and me. I believe any reviewer with pride should produce their own product photos.
2. All images were shot with my personal set of the Leica M10-R, Leica Sofort 2 and respective M-lenses
3. This review is not sponsored.
4. I write as a passion and a hobby, and I appreciate that photography brands are kind enough to respect and work with me.
5. The best way to support me is to share the review, or you can always help support me by contributing to my fees to WordPress for the domain using the Paypal button at the bottom of the page
One Reply to “The Little Leica That Keeps Calling: Lynn’s Second Sofort 2 Photowalk”