My experimental collection of work contains photos of what I broadly consider lomography, which is maybe most easily described as, "taking bad photos on purpose." I do this because it produces results I'd never get by thinking too carefully before taking the picture, and some of the results are really exciting to me.
If you want to know more about lomography, which is typically done on film, you can read the 10 Golden Rules on the Lomography website, but the rules can pretty much be condensed down to, "don't worry - just take the picture."
About My Film Photos
Most of the photos I take on film have been shot with film which was either expired or deliberately mistreated - leaving the film in hot places (which degrades the quality of film), cross-processing the film in chemical treatment it's not meant for, running it through an x-ray machine at the airport, and usually, shooting the film with very poor quality, cheap, plastic toy cameras.
The first lomography-type camera I ever got was the Holga 120S, a toy camera that shoots 120 film with a shiny black interior and a plastic lens. It creates some heavy and uneven vignettes and somehow still works even with a piece of something rattling around inside.
About My Mavica Photos
I'm new to Mavica photography and am still learning what the Mavica is best at capturing. It takes photos on floppy disks and memory sticks, but for now, I prefer to use floppy disks. The model I own is the FD-100 and when I got it, I had to take it apart to clean and re-grease the lead screw inside to resolve an error code I was getting, but now the camera works perfectly.
Taking photos with it requires a very different system from shooting on film or on a modern digital camera. I'm still learning the format, and it's been a lot of fun to shoot with.