Stephanie Brim
Mental Experimental.
Yes, I'm at it again...some late night spec work on the beast that will eventually become a completely insane pinhole. I kinda want to get everyone's idea as to how completely nuts I am and whether or not this is even possible to begin with due to how interesting it'll be to keep light tight...but here goes nothing.
I've shot a lot of cameras. I have some really nice equipment thanks to some people here, but sometimes I want to reach for something simple...something completely unrefined that I can just mess around with. It makes life more interesting. It challenges my creative side. And sometimes, as in this case, it challenges my wood- and metalworking skills. So what am I building? Essentially, I'm looking at creating something of a switchable pinhole camera.
Yes, this is insane. Why am I doing it? Because I darn well want to, that's why. I want to see if I *can* do it, first of all, and then see what the thing is capable of once I'm done. I haven't done a project working with my hands for a while and I need to do something in this town other than wander around taking photos of people...and I'm not leaving town for at least another week. I'm going nuts, as you can tell, and this project will lift my spirits a bit.
I've already gutted the donor camera (my Anniversary Brownie) pretty well and good. I'm only going to keep two parts of the original camera for my use: the metal film feeding part and the wooden front panel with the shutter. The rest is going away. I'm going to be taking a trip to Hobby Lobby (hopefully tomorrow) to get a few things.
For all you do-it-yourselfers, I do have a few questions. Is sturdy cardboard covered in good, soft black leather going to be good enough for the body of the camera? Should I keep the original brass film winder so that I don't have to fashion something like that? The original vision for the interchangable pinholes is something like a large format camera's lensboards...I'm thinking that would be the easiest way to get this to work *and* be light tight. I was thinking of fashioning the thing so that you put the 'pinhole' boards on the camera from the *inside*...would eliminate a lot of light problems in my opinion. Also, would you keep and modify the original shutter, as much as it is one, or would you go ahead and fashion something that may work better?
Also, please note...this is going to be my first time tinkering with pinhole building. I may go through a few of these cameras before I get it right...but box cameras are a dime a dozen these days and relatively easy to do from scratch.
So yeah...call me completely nuts. Please. But don't tell me not to do this. I'll shoot with my rangefinders and plan to do so tomorrow...but I want a side project to work on that can take up my time and perhaps provide me with interesting, if not incredibly good, results.
I've shot a lot of cameras. I have some really nice equipment thanks to some people here, but sometimes I want to reach for something simple...something completely unrefined that I can just mess around with. It makes life more interesting. It challenges my creative side. And sometimes, as in this case, it challenges my wood- and metalworking skills. So what am I building? Essentially, I'm looking at creating something of a switchable pinhole camera.
Yes, this is insane. Why am I doing it? Because I darn well want to, that's why. I want to see if I *can* do it, first of all, and then see what the thing is capable of once I'm done. I haven't done a project working with my hands for a while and I need to do something in this town other than wander around taking photos of people...and I'm not leaving town for at least another week. I'm going nuts, as you can tell, and this project will lift my spirits a bit.
I've already gutted the donor camera (my Anniversary Brownie) pretty well and good. I'm only going to keep two parts of the original camera for my use: the metal film feeding part and the wooden front panel with the shutter. The rest is going away. I'm going to be taking a trip to Hobby Lobby (hopefully tomorrow) to get a few things.
For all you do-it-yourselfers, I do have a few questions. Is sturdy cardboard covered in good, soft black leather going to be good enough for the body of the camera? Should I keep the original brass film winder so that I don't have to fashion something like that? The original vision for the interchangable pinholes is something like a large format camera's lensboards...I'm thinking that would be the easiest way to get this to work *and* be light tight. I was thinking of fashioning the thing so that you put the 'pinhole' boards on the camera from the *inside*...would eliminate a lot of light problems in my opinion. Also, would you keep and modify the original shutter, as much as it is one, or would you go ahead and fashion something that may work better?
Also, please note...this is going to be my first time tinkering with pinhole building. I may go through a few of these cameras before I get it right...but box cameras are a dime a dozen these days and relatively easy to do from scratch.
So yeah...call me completely nuts. Please. But don't tell me not to do this. I'll shoot with my rangefinders and plan to do so tomorrow...but I want a side project to work on that can take up my time and perhaps provide me with interesting, if not incredibly good, results.