This was built around a "dichroic X cube" meant for projector systems. it's supposed to combine RGB into white, I'm using it in reverse to split white light into RGB, then record the image simultaneously on 3 pieces of film.
Compared to normal trichromes, this has no ghosting and artifacts from things moving in between 3 successive shots.
I printed individual 35mm (well I guess more like 24x24mm) film holders, which snap onto the frame using 2 magnets + a labyrinthine light seal. Each has it's own little darkslide. One of them has the focosing screen from an old Praktica on it which you use as a ground glass to focus before replacing it with the 3rd film holder and then pulling all the slides.
I also designed a custom developing rack for Paterson tanks which takes individual film bits from these and holds them radially for processing.
The front is just a Mamiya press lens
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I have since abandoned this after taking like 1 successful shot, because it's an incredible pain in the ass to work with, and results are not very good. But it was fun. The main quality issue is that the cube is letting in light from the other channels and there's not much I can do about it. So the edges get all crazy. I'm working instead now on a new design that uses normal (non-chromatic) half mirrors, and uses normal color filters near each piece of film instead for RGB (+ ND filters to match all their light requirements to each other)
Compared to normal trichromes, this has no ghosting and artifacts from things moving in between 3 successive shots.
I printed individual 35mm (well I guess more like 24x24mm) film holders, which snap onto the frame using 2 magnets + a labyrinthine light seal. Each has it's own little darkslide. One of them has the focosing screen from an old Praktica on it which you use as a ground glass to focus before replacing it with the 3rd film holder and then pulling all the slides.
I also designed a custom developing rack for Paterson tanks which takes individual film bits from these and holds them radially for processing.
The front is just a Mamiya press lens
----------
I have since abandoned this after taking like 1 successful shot, because it's an incredible pain in the ass to work with, and results are not very good. But it was fun. The main quality issue is that the cube is letting in light from the other channels and there's not much I can do about it. So the edges get all crazy. I'm working instead now on a new design that uses normal (non-chromatic) half mirrors, and uses normal color filters near each piece of film instead for RGB (+ ND filters to match all their light requirements to each other)

