what you are attemting to do is exactly what a typical SLR shutter already does. It has two curtains. The first curtain opens the exposure and the second closes it. Most exposures are so short that the closing curtain starts closing the exposure before the opening curtain has fully opened the film. So infact, the exposure is a swipe across the film which is so fast that no movement is apparent. However, if the swipe is slowed down, then a moving subject starts to take on the effect you are talking about. The classic example of this in action is Lartigues racing car wheel.
http://www.masters-of-photography.com/L/lartigue/lartigue_car_trip.html
So, if you could link up the camera shutter curtain to a different timer which also controlled the speed of the curtains, then you would get the effect you are after. You need to be aware which way the curtain is moving, horizontally or vertically.
Easiest way would be to use a large format camera and place your slit moving device inside in the camera just in front of the film plane unless you have the ability to link into the electrics on an SLR and control the shutter that way.
Also read this if you have not already seen it:
http://www.rit.edu/~andpph/text-art+math/index.html
have fun...
[edit]I hate to mention the "D" word here but a scanning back placed on a LF camera would achieve exactly what you want.[/edit]
http://www.masters-of-photography.com/L/lartigue/lartigue_car_trip.html
So, if you could link up the camera shutter curtain to a different timer which also controlled the speed of the curtains, then you would get the effect you are after. You need to be aware which way the curtain is moving, horizontally or vertically.
Easiest way would be to use a large format camera and place your slit moving device inside in the camera just in front of the film plane unless you have the ability to link into the electrics on an SLR and control the shutter that way.
Also read this if you have not already seen it:
http://www.rit.edu/~andpph/text-art+math/index.html
have fun...
[edit]I hate to mention the "D" word here but a scanning back placed on a LF camera would achieve exactly what you want.[/edit]
Last edited by a moderator: