Daire Quinlan
Subscriber
- Joined
- Sep 8, 2008
- Messages
- 287
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- Multi Format
Finally finished my 8x10 that's been sitting idly in a press for quite a while. I spent ages trying to assemble some sort of complicated clever way of holding in the ground glass and film holders, eventually I settled on rubber bands 
Takes normal 8x10 film holders, 300mm Industar 37 in front of a Sinar leaf shutter, all bolted onto nested foamcore boxes that do the job of focusing. Unfortunately shooting it and developing the subsequent sheets is a bit time consuming so I've only really had a chance to go through a couple of shots just to verify it was actually working. Nothing quite like a negative 8 inches by 10 inches in size
Here's the beasty itself, more notes on the flickr page if you click through.
Here are a couple of test shots:
Incidentally, taking shots of red flowers under tungsten light with B&W paper is never going to be an ideal situation ... 32 sec for one of them at f/4.5 :rolleyes:

Takes normal 8x10 film holders, 300mm Industar 37 in front of a Sinar leaf shutter, all bolted onto nested foamcore boxes that do the job of focusing. Unfortunately shooting it and developing the subsequent sheets is a bit time consuming so I've only really had a chance to go through a couple of shots just to verify it was actually working. Nothing quite like a negative 8 inches by 10 inches in size

Here's the beasty itself, more notes on the flickr page if you click through.
Here are a couple of test shots:
Incidentally, taking shots of red flowers under tungsten light with B&W paper is never going to be an ideal situation ... 32 sec for one of them at f/4.5 :rolleyes:
@Mark Fisher, sinar shutters are basically big leaf shutters that sit behind the lens. They're actually designed for Sinar monorails (f2 ? Norma ?) where they sit between the front standard and the bellows, and sinar lenses are mounted in the front. They have relatively standard lensboard like mountings on them though so they're easy to adapt.
