


Introduction: When Your Camera Fits in Your Pocket (And Your Soul)
Let’s be real: the Ricoh GR1s is the James Dean of film cameras. It’s compact, it’s cool, and it doesn’t give a damn about your Instagram filters. Designed in the ‘90s, worshipped in the 2020s, this little black box is the reason your Fuji X100V feels like a try-hard.
I took it for a spin to channel my inner Daido Moriyama. Spoiler: I didn’t become a street photography legend. But I did scare a pigeon.










Design: “A Brick, But Make It Fashion”
Specs:
- Size: Smaller than a TV remote (and twice as fun).
- Weight: 185g (or “light enough to forget it’s in your jeans… until you sit on it”).
- Aesthetic: A minimalist black slab that screams, “I read Sartre and drink black coffee.”
The GR1s looks like a calculator designed by a Japanese architect. But that chunky front grip? Pure genius. It’s like shaking hands with a robot that gets you.
Pro Tip: If your camera doesn’t make you feel like a spy, you’re holding it wrong.
Controls: “Simplicity, Thy Name Is Ricoh”
The GR1s’ controls are smoother than a jazz saxophonist:
- Top Plate: A single “MODE” button toggles between auto-everything and Snap Mode (more on that later).
- Left Side: A gorgeous exposure comp dial (+/- 2 stops) and flash selector. It’s like having a tiny DJ mixer for light.
- Right Side: Nothing. Because sometimes less is more.
No menus. No touchscreens. Just pure, unadulterated clicks.
4. Snap Mode: “The Ninja Setting”
Engage Snap Mode, and the GR1s becomes a street-shooting samurai. It locks focus between 1-3 meters (translation: “everything in this general vicinity will be sharp-ish”). No autofocus lag. No whirring motors. Just click and chaos.
Why It Rules:
- Perfect for capturing strangers mid-sneeze.
- Makes you feel like a photojournalist fleeing paparazzi.
Why It’s Alone: Other “snap” cameras exist (looking at you, Samsung), but they’re about as refined as a kazoo solo.
The Lens: 28mm f/3.5 (Or “How to Be Wide Without Trying”)
Specs:
- Focal Length: 28mm (because seeing the world through a mailbox slot is art).
- Aperture: f/3.5 (not fast, but faster than your ex’s excuses).
This lens is sharper than a stand-up comedian’s punchlines. It’s also tiny—like a contact lens with ambitions. Moriyama’s high-contrast, gritty style? That’s all him. The GR1s just serves the canvas.
Fun Fact: Moriyama switched to digital GRs, but rumor has it his Wi-Fi password is still “ILOVEFILM.”
Stealth Level: “Ninja Approved”
- Silent Shutter: The GR1s is quieter than a librarian’s sigh.
- Blue LCD Backlight: Glows like a cyborg’s heartbeat in low light.
- Wrist Strap: Lets you swing it like a pocket watch while pretending to check the time.
The Moriyama Paradox: “Destroyer or Savior?”
Moriyama’s high-contrast, chaotic style made the GR1s iconic. But it also cursed it. Newbies buy it expecting “instant art,” only to realize they have to do the work.
Moriyama’s Wisdom:
- “Great photography is about waking people up to the drama in the mundane.”
- “Also, maybe stop copying my contrast settings, Karen.”
Downsides: “It’s Not Perfect (But Neither Are You)”
- Battery Dependency: No juice? No photos. Bring spares or embrace existential dread.
- Plastic Parts: The film door creaks like a haunted house floor.
- Price: Used GR1s prices now rival a kidney. Thanks, hipsters.
Final Verdict: “A Camera for the Brave, Not the Basic”
The Ricoh GR1s isn’t a camera. It’s a philosophy. A reminder that greatness fits in your pocket. A middle finger to megapixels and menu-diving.
Buy it if:
- You think “vintage” isn’t just a filter.
- You’re ready to see, not just shoot.
Skip it if:
- You need autofocus faster than your attention span.
- You think photography requires a backpack full of gear.
Rating: 5/5 stars (for soul). 0/5 stars (for impressing your TikTok followers).
Now go forth and shoot like it’s 1996. Or just cradle the GR1s and whisper sweet nothings. We don’t care. 📸✨

























