Handmade camera for next to nothing

trittium

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Oct 3, 2005
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I bought a bought a dirty old oak box at salvation army and transformed it into a beautiful homemade pinhole camera. It look a lot of old english scratch cover wood polish to get it looking good, but Here it is. The box cost 75 cents

I made a hole in the top with an exato knife and glued a brass washer over it. I cut weather stipping ($1.98 for a 12 ft roll) and cut it on an agle to make it light tight.

Then I cut out the bottom of the box to allow light to pass through. The whole thing is held together using tension from rubber bands. A 4x5 back can be held on as well as a 6x9 rollfilm back.

Finally I tapes a piece of light light tight plastic on the inside of the camera with a tiny pinhole in it.

This just goes to show you that with a little thinking and a little work, you too can make a beautiful easy camera. I will post some image taken with this later. I need to work out exposure times for the camera.
 
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Beautiful work, puts my paint can pinhole camera to shame. I'd love to see some photographs taken with it.
 
Thanks everyone! To answer Eriks question, the ground glass is actually 9x12(old plate film size) in a 4x5 adapter. I have a 9x12 plate film to film 6x9 roll film adapter I am planing to use with that. I am trying exposures with 4x5 right now. I am hoping to develope them tonight.
 
I am having some issues. The original pinhole was way too small. The washer was also blockinging off some of the pinhole. I solved this by mounting the pinhole on the front washer. I am also having issues working out exposure time with 4x5. It takes so bloody long. I have to get my roll film back, back. It is currently attached to my voigtlander alpin that is at the repair shop. :(
 
With pinhole photography, shutter times can run into minutes, even hours. It's definitely not a technique for the impatient. :)
 
RML is right - reciprocity failure can push your exposure into hours - there is a nice pinhole designer / exposure calculator at www.pinhole.cz by David Balihar - made things a lot easier for me ;)
 
Finally got some decient results. I shot 10 years expired kodak ektachrome 64t and developed in in Diafine.

8 min exposure
381372485_04a74d2d04_o.jpg


5 min exposure
381372075_b87000556e_o.jpg


6 min exposure
381371763_a428b2f281_o.jpg


5 hour exposure of me sleeping
381371574_6a7cbddae4_o.jpg
 
Looks good. I really like it!

Maybe I'll look into a pinhole for rollfilm, use a small red window to count frames, same method as yours - using an old wooden box.



nice cam, and nice images, but are the circular framing issues due to the size of the brass 'O' ?
 
Ash said:
Looks good. I really like it!

Maybe I'll look into a pinhole for rollfilm, use a small red window to count frames, same method as yours - using an old wooden box.



nice cam, and nice images, but are the circular framing issues due to the size of the brass 'O' ?

I don't think so, with a bright light the image extends to the corners, I just think that the hole isn't far enough from the back of the film. I think they are off center because the brass "o" isn't mounted perfectly.
 
The exposure times don't look to bad for indoors! Foamcore works wonders for pinholes, too.


30 seconds on a bright, sunny day.


5 minutes in the shade; could have used a tad more.
 
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