Picking up a disposable to cover a specific event in color while having black and white in my regular cameras... sounds familiar :-) Anyways, this time it was a Fuji Quicksnap, 27 exposures for THB600, which was steep, but still the lowest price I could find for a disposable with flash, given that other places were selling them for THB50 more (they also did have Kodak Daylight, 39 exposures for THB580, but that doesn't come with flash, and hence only suitable for daylight)
I couldn't find any info about the film itself on the package, but looking online, it turns out the Quicksnap has less sensitive film than the Kodak, ISO 400 vs ISO 800; that said, the film is apparently Fuji's own Superia X-Tra, otherwise discontinued in box-form :-) Also of note is that you don't have to worry about holding down a button for flash, as the Quicksnap uses a switch for the flash, that even pushes up a small plastic block that lights up, so there's no mistaking whether you have flash on :-) (That small plastic block also means that it cannot be dismantled for reloading as readily as the Kodak; I know from experience) Also, after taking the last exposure, the advance wheel advances the film straight into the cylinder rather than locking the shutter a few more times like the Kodak did, so no chance of losing a great moment to being on the lightstruck film leader :-)
( A hopping good time with Fuji )
I couldn't find any info about the film itself on the package, but looking online, it turns out the Quicksnap has less sensitive film than the Kodak, ISO 400 vs ISO 800; that said, the film is apparently Fuji's own Superia X-Tra, otherwise discontinued in box-form :-) Also of note is that you don't have to worry about holding down a button for flash, as the Quicksnap uses a switch for the flash, that even pushes up a small plastic block that lights up, so there's no mistaking whether you have flash on :-) (That small plastic block also means that it cannot be dismantled for reloading as readily as the Kodak; I know from experience) Also, after taking the last exposure, the advance wheel advances the film straight into the cylinder rather than locking the shutter a few more times like the Kodak did, so no chance of losing a great moment to being on the lightstruck film leader :-)
( A hopping good time with Fuji )