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Showing posts with label Film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Film. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

Film Box Pinhole Camera

This post goes back in history.  The year was 2010, but it hearkened back to my college years and my first photography class in late 1979.  In an attempt to teach us the concepts of photography, we built our own pinhole cameras out of cardboard and a soda can for the pinhole.  These cameras produced 4"x5" negatives because we used 8"x10" photo paper and cut it down into four equal sizes, which gave us four "negatives" per sheet.  This type of early photography, from the 1820s, was called Calotype photography.  As an example, here is one of those shots I took back in 1979:


It shows the parking lot of Southeastern Illinois College, which is the college I went to.  I chose that subject because you could only load and take one picture at a time and to load and unload the camera, it had to be done in the darkroom - and I used the college's darkroom.  Plus, the original shot was a "negative" image and had to be contact printed to get a positive print.  Fast forward to 2010.
Remembering those early, (for me), pinhole camera days, I thought I'd revisit them and make my own pinhole camera again.  I had read where people were using all sorts of containers to use for their camera bodies and then adapting photographic paper or different sizes of film for their negatives.  Some of the smallest cameras I saw being made were out of matchboxes.  This inspired me to use an empty box of film for my camera body.  When it was finished, this is what it looked like:


But to use it, I had to cut down a piece of 35mm Kodak Tri-X 400 black and white film to shoot in it and then tape up the box so it wouldn't have any light leaks.  For my "shutter," I simply used a piece of tape over the pinhole "lens."  It didn't look so polished, but it did keep the film from the light:


It took me several attempts of shooting before I was able to get a decent image, but one of the earlier images that didn't turn out so good looked like this:


Finally, I was able to get a fairly good image, and it was taken at the Fairfield, Illinois fairground during their Fall Fun Fest days of 2010:


I don't know what that curved group of light blobs were or what caused them, but they were present in all my shots, even when I used a different pinhole piece of aluminum in my final iteration of the camera.  The above shot looked like this taken with another camera, which employed about a 28mm focal length, so I guess my film box pinhole camera had a pinhole about the equivalent of a 28mm lens:


Since I eventually got my pinhole camera to take a picture you could somewhat recognize, I considered it a success.  Now, I'm wanting to build another pinhole camera that uses photographic paper and get back into taking some calotypes.  Stay tuned!

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Film Is Alive!

As most of my regular readers here probably know, I've always been heavily into film photography.  So, I'm extremely excited about a new company in Italy getting started up to make film. They are called Film Ferrania and had to find an old building, work with the government there and start everything from square one. But, I think they're almost ready to release the first batch of 35mm, 120, 8mm and 16mm 100 speed color reversal film. For the first release, all the different formats will be in the same emulsion.

I can't wait!


Friday, November 16, 2012

Subliminal Messages

Have I mentioned I like taking pictures on film?  If not, here's a subliminal reminder.
















And that long-forgotten and discontinued classic, Kodak Kodachrome, seen here in a tv commercial.


Friday, January 27, 2012

The End Of An Era?

On January 19th, 2012, Kodak announced that it had filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. For me, this is bad news, but not unexpected. The field of photography has been changing rapidly in the last 10 years, with new technologies literally destroying older, and better ways of doing things. Did you know that digital technology, (cameras, etc.), has not evolved enough to be able to match the quality and clarity of a good film camera? I read somewhere that you'd need a camera with approximately 150 megapixels to equal the clarity of a film camera with a good lens. And digital is making film obsolete? Let's not totally dispense with the old until the new is better. Digital also has a fatal flaw of not being able to reproduce colors as well as film can. Look through the pictures below and tell me if you've ever seen a digital image with colors this rich and vibrant. They were all taken on Kodak Kodachrome slide film, another film product that has fallen by the wayside and is gone.