Perfekta II
This is an odd one. I got this camera from a relative (as anyone getting into film photography will get a heap of old film cameras of questionable state and quality). This model was more of a budget and simple to use camera aimed at consumers, but many would categorize these today as "toy cameras". And any doubt aimed at this camera is well deserved. It's a cheap camera made almost inclusively out of bakelite, with a lens design that is so simple it's one step away from being a pinhole camera, and an aperture consisting of differently sized holes punched into a metal disc you can rotate with your finger. It's simple, cheap and old. But it takes (very pricey, although) still available 120 roll film. After shooting a test roll with it, I decided to include this camera in my camera bag on a lot of hikes over the years, as using the camera is overly simplistic, and it has that kind of poor image quality that gives the images a very "old timey" vibe. This is not the camera to chase optical perfection, but a camera that can take bad looking images, but also surprise you at times. For an example of said surprises, see my favorite image produced by this thing so far, aptly titled "Boats"