gonna start building box cameras ...

Trail

Trail

  • 0
  • 0
  • 41
IMG_6621.jpeg

A
IMG_6621.jpeg

  • 0
  • 1
  • 93
Carved bench

A
Carved bench

  • 0
  • 3
  • 146
Anthotype-5th:6:25.jpg

A
Anthotype-5th:6:25.jpg

  • 6
  • 4
  • 168

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
198,071
Messages
2,769,140
Members
99,552
Latest member
Jollylook
Recent bookmarks
1

removed account4

Subscriber
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
Messages
29,833
Format
Hybrid
i have bought enough of them ( they are my fav! )
but now i am gonna start to build them.
i am gonna make 4x5 and bigger ones
with a hinged out back to hole paper or plate
that can be removed ,,, i know anchoroptical
but have had a heck of a time figuring out what meniscus
lenses they make / sell will cover a certain image circle.

does anyone have experience with meniscus lenses or
+/- diopters enough that they know the focal length or
the image circle they project ??

thanks in advance for your help!

john
 

Rick A

Subscriber
Joined
Mar 31, 2009
Messages
9,876
Location
Laurel Highlands
Format
8x10 Format
Take a close look at the box cameras you already have, and measure them. They probably are all pretty close in size, and shouldn't be too hard to extrapolate to 4x5 dimensions. Sounds like a fun project, do you have any spare single elements laying about that you can start with? I'm sure you could use some of the info from pinhole cameras to work this one out. I might have to play with this one myself, just to see what happens. Never know, might end up with a great camera in the process.

Rick
 

Rick A

Subscriber
Joined
Mar 31, 2009
Messages
9,876
Location
Laurel Highlands
Format
8x10 Format
Just thinking-- do you have any large magnifying glasses? that might be useful as the meniscus, then play with different drilled apertures and focal lengths until you hit on the one you like best. Maybe interchangable apertures panels that slip in behind the lens. Also, use a 'box in a box'' adjustable focal length.

Rick
 

Barry S

Member
Joined
Jan 28, 2007
Messages
1,350
Location
DC Metro
Format
Large Format
John--Usually, you'd start by thinking about the angle of view you want and choose the focal length to match the format. Let's say you want a normal lens for 4"x5". The diagonal for 4x5 is about 6.4" or about 160mm. You can use this handy table by dividing the diagonal of the format by the focal length of the lens to get the angle of view. http://tinyurl.com/yg7689m

A reasonable lens diameter (largest aperture) would be something like 1/4 to 1/6 of the focal length. For a 160mm lens, something in the 25mm to 40mm range for the lens diameter would be fine. If you want to reduce aberrations, you'll need to make a stop to stop down the lens to at least f/16 (focal length/stop diameter=aperture). The stop should be placed in front of the lens at a distance of about 1/6 of the focal length.

A single element lens will usually *illuminate* a very large image circle, however, as you move away from the center--the performance will degrade. You can start with positive meniscus, plano-convex, or bi-convex lenses--they'll all form images. For a little more money, an achromatic doublet is an excellent starting lens. Diopter is 1/focal length (in meters), so a 160mm lens would have a diopter of 1/.16= 6.25. Have fun!
 

Cainquixote

Member
Joined
Nov 26, 2009
Messages
46
Location
Napoli
Format
Multi Format
i'm glad you started this thread.

I'm getting ready to do the same thing with 8x10 and liquid light covered glass sheets.

I never thought about a hinged back for the plates. Most of what i've doodled has had a nested back design.
 

Steve Smith

Member
Joined
May 3, 2006
Messages
9,109
Location
Ryde, Isle o
Format
Medium Format
I have sketched out plans for a 5x4 box camera but I have not started to make it yet (just as well as I have many other half finished projects already).

I was thinking of using a 135mm lens fixed at hyperfocal distance for about f16. I have also thought about a 5x4 TLR!


Steve.
 
OP
OP

removed account4

Subscriber
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
Messages
29,833
Format
Hybrid
thanks for your inputs!

i have to look better at the little lenses that i harvested off the boxes i have ..
they seemed like single cell, but who knows maybe they are something different ?

i've made backs out of cardboard and they work amazingly well for paper ( too light for glass ) plates.
i was thinking a ridged piece and a pair of clips to hold the back in place.
kind of like how a reducing back is held onto a modern camera ...
or may be sliding things like a graflock back ...
and maybe a primitive viewing screen or just a V on the top of the box to point and shoot.
i wish i had the wherewithall to make some sort of a guillotine shutter system :smile:
but THAT would be too complicated and too much fun :smile: ( just takes shim stock and a pokey thing )
so i have to figure out a way to easily cover and uncover the (recessed) lens without shaking the box too much ...

john
 

Joe VanCleave

Member
Joined
Jan 20, 2004
Messages
677
Location
Albuquerque,
Format
Pinhole
I've made several box cameras over the years, the most recent one being a nested box arrangement constructed of black foamcore board, mounted on a bottom plate of plywood. The front half is larger than the back half, and is permanently attached to the baseboard, the back half slides in and out of the front, for an effective light seal. I've used a 2-element coated 50mm diameter, 150mm f.l. binocular objective lens (f/3 wide open), and also using a plastic credit-card sized fresnel magnifier. Both of these variety suffer from severe off-axis abberations, the fresnel being worse, but can be tamed if adequately stopped down. For moody portraits, they to look nice rather wide open, however.

For timing the exposures I use a hand-timed lens cap, with the caveat that I'm shooting grade 2 B/W paper negatives with a working exposure index of 12; in bright daylight it's a bit iffy, since the meter-recommended exposure times can be less than a second; in this situation I typically stop down to >f/50. For indoor exposures these lenses work good with wider apertures, typically 10-20 seconds in a brightly lit room.

My latest idea is an 8x10 camera that will accept Riteway-style sheet film holders, with a fixed focal distance, using a single miniscus lens stopped down to about 3mm aperture (roughly F/80-ish). The idea is to set up the lens for a hyperfocal situation, for landscapes. Thus, no viewscreen needed for focusing, just viewing dots on the sides and top (with which I've had good success in pinhole cameras). My plans are to position the lens with the concave side toward the subject, aperture in front, and use a form of guillotine shutter that operates internally, permitting placement of yellow/orange filters over the lens if desired.

I'd like to eventually make a collapsing camera with a bellows arrangement, but for now it's a box camera.

There are lots of box camera idea available at the George Eastman House online museum of old photographic equipment, here.

~Joe
 

greybeard

Member
Joined
Jun 10, 2005
Messages
366
Location
Northern Cal
Format
Large Format
so i have to figure out a way to easily cover and uncover the (recessed) lens without shaking the box too much ...


You can make a really simple sector-type shutter to uncover and then re-cover the lens, using nothing more sophisticated than a coping saw and drill. Imagine a disk with a hole the size of your lens opening, and a spring that wants to rotate the disk; a projection on the edge of the disk is held by a stop on a pivotinglever, with another stop to "catch" the disk when the shutter is "open". Pivoting the lever back the other way will let the disk rotate far enough to "close" the shutter and catch on a second stop, exactly like the escapement action in a mechanical clock. A slight elaboration will allow you to keep the shutter from re-opening when you cock it, but if you are using plateholders or a darkroom-loaded camera, that isn't a problem.

I made something like this as a kid, using scraps of countertop Formica (the thin stuff that you glue down, not the melamine-clad particle board that you see now) but thin aluminum or even wood could be used.

Sounds like a fun project to do with the grandson in a couple of years.
 

Andrew Moxom

Member
Joined
Feb 2, 2007
Messages
4,888
Location
Keeping the
Format
Multi Format
For shutters how about an internal shutter?

John, I made this type of internal shutter for a pinhole camera, and it should work well for your box cameras also. IT can use a standard cable release. What I like are the clean lines of the camera.
 

Attachments

  • 4x5-pinhole3.jpg
    4x5-pinhole3.jpg
    19 KB · Views: 215
  • 4x5-pinhole4.jpg
    4x5-pinhole4.jpg
    19.2 KB · Views: 239
  • 4x5-pinhole5.jpg
    4x5-pinhole5.jpg
    19.5 KB · Views: 175
  • 4x5-pinhole6.jpg
    4x5-pinhole6.jpg
    18.1 KB · Views: 172
OP
OP

removed account4

Subscriber
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
Messages
29,833
Format
Hybrid
i've been a bit stalled ... the last few months have been kind of " tough "
my 5 year old and i glued thick popsicle sticks together the other day
they will be the foundation of the fun :smile:

when i get a chance to complete more steps i will post images ...
 

darinwc

Subscriber
Joined
Dec 14, 2003
Messages
3,125
Location
Sacramento,
Format
Multi Format
I really wanted to build pinhole cameras... but i couldnt for the life of me get nice box joints on my cheap table saw.

Hand-timed shutters are easy to make. Some old brass lenses used a disk pinned to the top of the shutter. There was a string attached to the bottom. Pull the string and the disk rotates up. Let go and it falls back over the lens.

Hand-timed shutters work much better with slow film.
 

Rick A

Subscriber
Joined
Mar 31, 2009
Messages
9,876
Location
Laurel Highlands
Format
8x10 Format
I really wanted to build pinhole cameras... but i couldnt for the life of me get nice box joints on my cheap table saw.

Hand-timed shutters are easy to make. Some old brass lenses used a disk pinned to the top of the shutter. There was a string attached to the bottom. Pull the string and the disk rotates up. Let go and it falls back over the lens.

Hand-timed shutters work much better with slow film.
Do you have a router table? They are superior for setting up and cutting box joints. I made both my 4x5 pinhole and 4x5 field cameras using hand cut dovetails. They are actually easier to make than you think. Years ago I made a box joint fixture for the table saw. If you use a length of 3/8x16 allthread, you can make an indexable jig that is deadly accurate. Every one turn of the handle will move the jig 1/16". You clamp all four pieces to the jig and cut them at the same time one one side, then flip them to cut the other side. Sorry, I didn't mean to hijack the thread and ramble about woodworking, I'm a retired wood butcher.
 
OP
OP

removed account4

Subscriber
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
Messages
29,833
Format
Hybrid
well
i finally built a prototype camera last night
and i am exposing something with it right now.
it is just smaller than 4x5 ...
and i am using a whole plate brass lens with it.
foam core first, then eventually after i get the
rough bits ironed out i will start to make these in a kit form
and out of wood ...

(there was a url link here which no longer exists)
image made ...
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Joined
Nov 23, 2007
Messages
712
Location
Washington D
Format
Multi Format
sounds like fun

I want to make simple shutters like the one described a few posts up...SOMEWHERE I have an old book from Lindsay's Technical Books that describes simple shutters...but I can't find it...aaarrggghhh
 

Curt

Member
Joined
Sep 22, 2005
Messages
4,618
Location
Pacific Nort
Format
Multi Format
This is more interesting than the average threads like "what's the development time for xxx film in xxx dev.

I'm building an 11x14 view camera right now, having made the brass hardware for the front lensboard just this evening. Box cameras sound like fun.

How does the liquid emulsion work out, any pictures or info. ?

Curt
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom