Mon, Dec 23, 11:52 AM CST

Renderosity Forums / Photography



Welcome to the Photography Forum

Forum Moderators: wheatpenny Forum Coordinators: Anim8dtoon

Photography F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 26 6:56 am)



Subject: not as exciting for ya'll as the guppo update, but very exciting for me...


Slynky ( ) posted Thu, 13 June 2002 at 3:32 PM ยท edited Thu, 21 November 2024 at 10:32 PM

file_12435.jpg

well, I got my roll processed, and it seems as if I have a working pinhole camera! I didn't ask for any pics to be developed in order to save on costs (I just used the laundry money to get the roll back, fudge), and the pics weren't supposed to be anything more than a test roll shot around my room to see if the camera worked, which it did. I was really worried after i shot that the hole was too big... looks a little big, but the exposure seems easy to work with in post in the darkroom. The roll was Ilford 400 black and white. Strange thing. I couldn't take half of the lens thingiemabob off because it was literally welded onto the camera body. That however is fine, because everything like the shutters and what is attached to it permanently as well, and I wanted to keep that for easy shooting (the shutter relase is broken, but pushing down on a little part as outlined in the picture opens the shutter, revealing the pinhole setup). The strangest thing tho is, there is a piece of glass behind the shutter itself, which no matter how hard I smashed (Ismashed REALLY hard too), it wouldn't break (there's 2 very tiny chips in it, which will prolly show through in pics, but oh well, this is a DRITY DIRTY rig, lol). Still, its not part of the focussing system of the lens that I had to tear off(that half is sitting a few feet away from me, not really able to tell what it is anymore). Also, it is curved, which makes me think it does bend light somehow... I wonder though, anyone have a clue? Its a Yashica Electro 35 once again... The pinhole setup itself is quite simple. Just a tiny hole in some alluminum foil, taped onto the area behind the shutter, infront of the iris (which I trashed as well, so I can't open the iris anymore, its a really tiny hole, and was a bitch to tape the foil on top of, and then find the area where the hole is to poke through the foil on). Tape and aluminum foil is all... oh yeah, and a smashed up camera that might've actually had some value, tho its infinitely more valuable to me now. Me can't wait, slide film, black and whtie, colour, ektachrome (typo, shaddup), the works, all with the ability to bring it into the darkroom or slide scanner at school, RA RA!!! oh yeah, the pic above is a scan (a terrible one at that with the old LED Canoscan I got hear, no DOF on the phucker at all it seems) of the "lens" area of the camera. I couldn't scan with the shutter open, cuz, well, i have to open the shutter with my hand or little bit of something manually) Still, that's sort of what the front of the camera looks like, lol. ry


Slynky ( ) posted Thu, 13 June 2002 at 3:40 PM

file_12436.jpg

here's the pic that shows what I have to push on...


doruksal ( ) posted Thu, 13 June 2002 at 4:31 PM

Your scanner does some interesting effects on the scanned image..! And, I'm quite curious about the results you've achieved with your "wreck pinhole cam"..!


Slynky ( ) posted Thu, 13 June 2002 at 5:26 PM

file_12437.jpg

scanned the negs on the very same crapy scanner, so please forgive the total lack of quality whatsoever.... ry


Michelle A. ( ) posted Thu, 13 June 2002 at 7:00 PM

How exciting! Can't wait to see more of what you come up with. How are you pushing that shutter thingie with aluminum foil covering the opening?

I am, therefore I create.......
--- michelleamarante.com


Slynky ( ) posted Thu, 13 June 2002 at 7:40 PM

the aluminum foil is what has the pinhole in it. The button there, just push it in the direction of the arrow, and the shutter opens, revealing the foil and pinhole which is in front of the iris.... just click your heels 3 times and you'll understand.


Michelle A. ( ) posted Thu, 13 June 2002 at 7:54 PM

I thought the aluminum foil covered the entire opening...guess not! Of course I didn't read your ramblings completely the first time....now I see the light!

I am, therefore I create.......
--- michelleamarante.com


Antoonio ( ) posted Mon, 17 June 2002 at 7:38 AM

HOLY MOSES, thats the look I'm trying to get with photoshop. Really waiting to see more of these. .n


doruksal ( ) posted Mon, 17 June 2002 at 1:40 PM

My dear Slynky, there really is nothing to forgive, and thanks for the post of negative scans..! :)
I don't know how much does it cost in your whereabouts, but look for it and if you find that it's affordable for you, than make these negatives of yours scanned with a "drum scanner" (or, at least a film scanner) in a local lab where these devices are available...
...You'll surely receive impressive resolution and quality with your scanned negatives, films, etc. : every sweet grain at your service..!

BTW, in the college that you're going to attend (or, have you started attending already..?), I guess it wouldn't be any problem for you to find the chance of using the scanners above (esp. a "drum scanner")...
...Go for it man, and make sure you post more of the results of your adventures with "The SWPC (Slynky's Wreck Pin-hole Cam)"..!

:)


Slynky ( ) posted Mon, 17 June 2002 at 1:56 PM

Concordia University has a really nice quality negative scanner (i dont think its a "drum scanner", but i know it can scan an entire roll one by one without stopping...). Still, I'm much more exciting about getting into the darkroom with these... btw, i now have a camera for Mexico it seems... we leave the 4th of July folks...


Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.