This 3-in-1 clip-on camera lens comes with 3 different lenses: fish-eye, wide-view and macro.

2 Lenses have protective caps, the third (macro) is a part of the wide-view lens assembly – it screws into it, so it does not really need its own cap.

The lenses were shipped inside a bubble mailer envelope, inside a plastic protective case.

When I got the package and saw only two lenses, and I got a bit upset until I saw a paper instruction explaining that the wide-view lens in fact consists of two parts, and the inner part does indeed include the macro piece.

The clip is made of thick quality plastic, it did not give me a feel that it breaks easily. It sits tight, and does not come off easily (in a sense that it's very hard to accidentally drop it). The lenses easily and smoothly screw in.

The macro has a left-hand thread, so it unscrews in the opposite direction – to unscrew it, you have to turn it clockwise.

Testing.

Here are some examples of pictures I took with these lens attachments – taken with my LG E960 (Nexus 4). Please excuse the quality of images, it has been reduced by the plugin that saves space / increases page loading time.

Example 1:

Original (no lens) vs. fish-eye vs. wide-view lens, low light/wide angle shot.

The angle on the wide-view is approximately 150% larger than the view without the lens.

The fish-eye is actually the widest; but it curls the sides, while the wide-view keeps the view more realistic-looking, just bending it slightly.

Example 2:

Original (no lens) vs. fish-eye vs. wide-view, medium light/wide angle shot.

The weird discoloration on the fish-eye is just my camera not focusing properly – I am posting this picture to show the difference in the angle.

I like fish-eye lens more for close-up pictures, and wide-view for the wide angle shots.

Example 3:

Original (no lens) vs. fish-eye, medium-low light/close-up shot.

Both pictures were taken from the exact same spot, I tried to not move my arm when I was clipping the lens on.

Some of the stuff from my room:

Link to the light: http://bit.ly/21uf0VH

Link to the store where I got the poster: http://bit.ly/21ufaw9 (and review)

Link to the metallic tin plates store: http://bit.ly/1LfXaBG

Link to the wall “plants”: http://bit.ly/1Rqpi4z

Random fish-eye close-up shots.

Macro lens.

Macro ended up being the most underrated lens of all three. It freaking rocks!

You do have to hold it very up-close, so the pictures come out properly focused. I failed at it slightly, but I blame the crappy camera on my phone.

Overall verdict.

It's an amazing buy for $2.72.

I can't believe they sell them this cheap, I'd pay up to $20 for the set.

The fish-eye lens is great for portrait shots, and the wide-view is about 1.5x the original picture. The macro takes a little getting used to, but once you understand how to get it to focus, you can take really cool shots.