"Enlarging" with a fresnel sheet magnifier?

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mabman

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Just curious, has anyone tried creating something of an "enlargement" using a fresnel sheet magnifier (such as one seen here)?

I envision something like a contact print, but with the sheet magnifier between the negative and the photo paper. If so, what does the end result look like? I would imagine there would be some distortions, etc. Perhaps I'm not searching correctly, but I can't find any examples of this directly.

It's an idle question, but I've seen these sheet magnifiers in stores a few times, and often wondered what the effect would be as an "enlarging" device.
 
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Put a print under this plastic fresnel magnifier ,whatever you see, will be whatever you get from contact print. I think fresnel magnifier plastic will focus the source light in to the paper and you will see dark and light circular rings.

Umut
 

Gerald C Koch

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Fresnel lenses are fine for concentrating light but cannot be used for imaging. The circular lines will also be reproduced.
 
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Fresnel lenses are fine for concentrating light but cannot be used for imaging. The circular lines will also be reproduced.

Not true. A fresnel lens (like most other lenses) has a focal length. You can use it for enlarging, but not for a contact print.
 

Gerald C Koch

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E76

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Umm, fresnel lenses can and have been used for imaging! They bring rays of light to a single point of focus, forming a real image, and they do have a focal length. Like all lenses the quality of the image depends on the quality of manufacture and most fresnel lenses are not built to very high standards. In this regard they are not very useful for imaging. Other than that, there's no reason why you can't use one!
 

holmburgers

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All I can say is that they do indeed form an image. I think it'd be cool to make a fresnel lens camera.

Someone with a Anniversary Graphic (focal plan shutter) should make a glass lensboard with a fresnel mounted to it. :D
 

jorj

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I've used a cheap fresnel as part of a box camera. Works fine, if a bit difficult to focus - the reading magnifier I used had a very short focal length, making it very sensitive...
 

Gerald C Koch

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The following quotation is from one of the many web sites discussing the use of Fresnel lenses. "Even though each groove or facet brings light precisely to a focus, the breaking up of the wavefront by the discontinuous surface of a Fresnel lens degrades the visible image quality. ... Fresnel lenses are usually not recommended for imaging applications in the visible light region of the spectrum".

You could use a Fresnel lens of very high quality but the image is still degraded. You can ignore civil laws but you cannot ignore the laws of optics. I could post many more quotations but what would be the point.
 
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michaelbsc

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So the answer is "Yes it will work."

Not well, but it will work. For that matter, a lawn mower can be used as transportation device. It isn't a good fit, but it will work.

I rather like Chris's idea to make a fresnel "lensboard" for a Speed. Might be better than a Holga.
 
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mabman

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Interesting. As it happens I also have an (ugly, but functional) Graphic w/ focal plane shutter that I planned to make a pinhole for, but haven't gotten around to it yet...
 

michaelbsc

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I think Jorj point that the sheet lenses you find in book stores have a short focal length isn't to be ignored.

Wonder where you could find them with longer focal lengths? Of course that would kind of defeat the light gathering function, so that's probably not a desired characteristic for most lens makers.

And with an aperture the size of a graphic lensboard the light falloff would probably be horrific.

Still might beat a Holga.
 
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Would such a fresnel sheet be useful for placing in front of the ground glass of a view camera to enhance it?
 

holmburgers

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Interesting. As it happens I also have an (ugly, but functional) Graphic w/ focal plane shutter that I planned to make a pinhole for, but haven't gotten around to it yet...

*thumbs up* :D

Terry, by many accounts these magnifiers work quite well for enhancing a ground-glass. I'll be trying soon, but haven't gotten around to it. There's a (there was a url link here which no longer exists)that discusses it.
 

Gerald C Koch

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The Canon lenses use a multilayer diffractive optical element. The pattern seen through a DO lens may look similar to that of a Fresnel lens but other patterns other than concentric rings are also used. Diffractive elements are thin phase elements that operate by means of interference and diffraction to produce arbitrary distributions of light or to aid in the design of optical systems. A pattern is etched onto the surface of the DO element and is only a wavelength or two deep. In a Fresnel lens, the rings are much, much deeper and they work by refraction rather than diffraction. So the Canon DO lenses do not use a Fresnel element.
 

Gerald C Koch

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The Fresnel lens was invented by a frenchman by the name of Augustine Jean Fresnel in 1822. Its purpose was to concentrate the light from lighthouses and make them more effective in warning ships.

An interesting fact, in pronouncing his name and the name of the lens he invented the 's' is silent so it is pronounced "frenel". The french appear to have an aversion to the sound of 's' in some words. This can be seen in many cognates. For example, ecole, foret, arret; the English words being school, forest, and arrest or stop.
 
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