How wide is feasible?

Coffee Shop

Coffee Shop

  • 0
  • 0
  • 39
Lots of Rope

H
Lots of Rope

  • 0
  • 0
  • 134
Where Bach played

D
Where Bach played

  • 4
  • 2
  • 471
Love Shack

Love Shack

  • 3
  • 2
  • 972
Matthew

A
Matthew

  • 5
  • 3
  • 2K

Forum statistics

Threads
199,808
Messages
2,796,852
Members
100,041
Latest member
assa2002
Recent bookmarks
1

alexhill

Member
Joined
May 22, 2010
Messages
174
Location
New Hampshir
Format
4x5 Format
6 inches (about 150 mm) is only slightly "widish" on 4x5 format (I call 180mm "normal" for 4x5), so I would not expect any serious falloff.

It is not too hard to make a "center filter" dodging mask for printing pinhole pix. Expose a piece of film in the camera to an evenly-toned subject (sky, grey card, etc.). Then make a contact positive from that negative, exposed and developed to the proper density to mask ("dodge') the corners of the frame.

Clever. I like the elegance of it, especially when thinking about funky curved film planes. I've always just made a dodging tool and done it by hand.
 

narsuitus

Member
Joined
Nov 24, 2004
Messages
1,813
Location
USA
Format
Multi Format
Here are the specifications on the widest 4x5 pinhole cameras (film width = 127 mm) I have made:

Cardboard Box (flat film plane)
0.0126 = pinhole diameter in inches
0.320 = pinhole diameter in mm
2.2 = Pinhole to Film Distance in inches
55 = Pinhole to Film Distance in mm
132 = angle of view

Mailing Tube (curved film plane)
0.0126 = pinhole diameter in inches
0.320 = pinhole diameter in mm
2.0 = Pinhole to Film Distance in inches
52 = Pinhole to Film Distance in mm
140 = angle of view

Mailing Tube (curved film plane)
0.0102 = pinhole diameter in inches
0.259 = pinhole diameter in mm
2.0 = Pinhole to Film Distance in inches
52 = Pinhole to Film Distance in mm
140 = angle of view

All pinholes were Laser cut in .001 inch stainless steel.
 
OP
OP
BetterSense

BetterSense

Member
Joined
Aug 16, 2008
Messages
3,151
Location
North Caroli
Format
35mm
How are you making your pinholes and measuring them? I've used the soda can method in the past but I can't get over the nagging feeling that I'm leaving image quality on the table. I may spring for one of the $25 .3mm pinholes sold on the auction site, but I wish one could buy cheaper pinhole assortments.
 

Lee L

Member
Joined
Nov 17, 2004
Messages
3,281
Format
Multi Format
Might have been me, Vaughn. I'm no longer interested in actively selling them because I don't really enjoy working for $5/hour, especially because my eyesight isn't what it used to be, but I do make one now and then for somebody.

However, somewhere on APUG is a detailed description of my current method, which is the best yet, if anyone is crazy enough to try it.
Here: (there was a url link here which no longer exists)
 

PhotoBob

Subscriber
Joined
Feb 16, 2006
Messages
590
Location
Abbotsford, BC
Format
Multi Format
Ultra-wide with a Zero

Hmmm? If the film was forced into a spherical shape rather than a semi-circular shape. The film would all be the same distance from the pinhole and you could make the focal length as short as was practical with the equipment you had. It would also give you a fisheye view, I think? I imagine the challenge is getting the film into this shape.
I agree with Vaughn: I have a Zero Image 4x5 camera and at the shortest "focal length" of approximately 25mm (from pinhole to film) the light drop off at the corners is significant. Vignetting on a B&W image is a nice effect but it doesn't look as good with colour film... IMHO...

Hmmm ... I have used the Zero Image 4x5 @ 25mm and find the images quite pleasing with Velvia. Although there is some light fall-off, I suspect one just has to understand how the camera makes the wide-angle exposure and plan accordingly. Not easy, but this is the wonderful thought provoking challenge of pinhole imaging, i.e., the joys of anticipation via experimentation.
All the best, and I've really enjoyed the discussion here with you guys :smile:
 

Raphael

Subscriber
Joined
Jul 26, 2006
Messages
416
Location
Europe, Fran
Format
Multi Format
Another example

Hello all,

Here is an example of a image I posted some month ago onto the gallery :

(there was a url link here which no longer exists)

It's 4x5" transparency film exposed with 23mm focal length !

I have used too a 16mm FL pinhole camera, with B&W large format film, if someone interested I can post an image of the result here (I have yet to scan it).

Regards,

Raphael
 

Marco B

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 13, 2005
Messages
2,736
Location
The Netherla
Format
Multi Format
Look up www.zeroimage.com and find the link on the left to Zero 45. There is a specifications sheet that lists the pinhole sizes and dimensions at 25mm, 50mm and 75mm equivalents. It may not be exactly what you are looking for but it will give you a start...

What I figure, is that I know Tmax can take many stops of overexposure without changing tonality too much, because it has so much straight-line. So I figure that if I expose enough that the corners get enough exposure, I will hopefully be able to dodge back the center and have it look at least somewhat normal tonality from the center outwards, if I can get the dodging right.

Have a look at my Zero Image 4x5 pinhole images in 25 mm configuration (probably a 110-120 degree super wide angle). Instead of dodging, you need to burn in the center, or dodge the edges :wink:.

http://www.boeringa.demon.nl/amsterdam_by_night/index.html
http://www.boeringa.demon.nl/amsterdam_by_day/index.html

My procedure for printing:

- First an overall hard grade short exposure, e.g. grade 3.5-4(5) for maybe 2.5-4 seconds max. This will ensure proper contrast in the corners / edges of the print, where the negative is extremely "thin"

- Than burn in the centre of the print using a grade 2-2.5 for maybe 15-25 seconds (exact centre may need more), using a paper with a hole cut in it of about 5 cm diameter, and continuously move it up/down vertically above the paper, hence giving the real center the most exposure, and to the edges gradually less. I do go as far as giving the edges an occasional small exposure in this step as well, when the paper with hole is the utmost highest position, but keep exposing the edges to a minimum.

Here is one image:

DN3_287.jpg

As you can see, a 25 mm pinhole with a 4x5 negative is perfectly feasible...
 

walter23

Member
Joined
Sep 19, 2006
Messages
1,206
Location
Victoria BC
Format
4x5 Format
I have a 25mm 4x5 pinhole camera. It covers to the edges, but the vignetting is very noticable. Not a bad thing for a lot of stuff. I don't remember the diameter of pinhole I'm using, but it is on very thin stock. I think it might have been around 0.15mm. Very small.

I have a couple of shots from it:
http://visualfiction.org/zenphoto/albums/4x5new/small-img001.jpg
http://visualfiction.org/zenphoto/albums/4x5new/sml-img019.jpg
http://visualfiction.org/zenphoto/albums/4x5new/sml-img021.jpg

The waterfall (first one) was taken right at the base of this waterfall. I mean pretty much right at the base. A more normal perspective shows how dramatic the wide angle is.
http://visualfiction.org/zenphoto/albums/4x5new/small-img004.jpg

(I actually scanned this with the film upside down so it is mirrored; I didn't notice before and didn't flip it):

It is ridiculously wide. When you think about it, 25mm is a pretty wide angle lens on a 35mm camera.. nevermind 4x5!

It's so wide that I still haven't come to terms with it and figured out how to frame things in an expected way. Even using diagonal lines I drew on the box top I still underestimate how wide my images will be.
 

Marco B

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 13, 2005
Messages
2,736
Location
The Netherla
Format
Multi Format
It's so wide that I still haven't come to terms with it and figured out how to frame things in an expected way. Even using diagonal lines I drew on the box top I still underestimate how wide my images will be.

I know the feeling. You really need to force yourself to go right up to the subject with a 25mm 4x5 LF pinhole. And with that I mean sometimes in the range of 10-25cm max.

Here is another extreme example of making maximum use of the extreme wide angle. I don't think I have to explain to you how close I set up the camera to the pump... it literally rested against the stone masonry:

DN3_293.jpg
 

glbeas

Member
Joined
Sep 25, 2002
Messages
3,950
Location
Marietta, Ga. USA
Format
Multi Format
Anybody ever try to make a non image neg from the pinhole camera aimed at an evenly lit blank wall and developed to just the right contrast and density then sandwich that with a neg for printing to automatically dodge the print? It would be a custom job for each camera and focal length used.
 

walter23

Member
Joined
Sep 19, 2006
Messages
1,206
Location
Victoria BC
Format
4x5 Format
I know the feeling. You really need to force yourself to go right up to the subject with a 25mm 4x5 LF pinhole. And with that I mean sometimes in the range of 10-25cm max.

Here is another extreme example of making maximum use of the extreme wide angle. I don't think I have to explain to you how close I set up the camera to the pump... it literally rested against the stone masonry:

That's a great image. Sometimes I think I must have placed my camera ridiculously far away from something, and then I catch a detail like the bricks in your image... that spout is like a brick's width away from the camera. Maybe two.
 

walter23

Member
Joined
Sep 19, 2006
Messages
1,206
Location
Victoria BC
Format
4x5 Format
Anybody ever try to make a non image neg from the pinhole camera aimed at an evenly lit blank wall and developed to just the right contrast and density then sandwich that with a neg for printing to automatically dodge the print? It would be a custom job for each camera and focal length used.

I just read about that yesterday. I think you have to make a contact positive for it to work first; or shoot transparency film.
 

glbeas

Member
Joined
Sep 25, 2002
Messages
3,950
Location
Marietta, Ga. USA
Format
Multi Format
Right, thats they way it works. A contact positive would be best. The neg would work better placed in front of the neg somehow to act as a center ND filter.
 

Mark Fisher

Member
Joined
Dec 13, 2003
Messages
1,691
Location
Chicago
Format
Medium Format
If you really want the widest angle, you could curve the film 360 inside a can and have the pinhole in the end. More than a touch of distortion and light fall off, though...:smile: Or take a round flat tin (cookie tin) and put a smaller cylinder inside and use multiple pinholes. I've never done either of these, but they are on my to-do list!
 

Marco B

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 13, 2005
Messages
2,736
Location
The Netherla
Format
Multi Format
If you really want the widest angle, you could curve the film 360 inside a can and have the pinhole in the end. More than a touch of distortion and light fall off, though...:smile:

William Mokrynski's "Endroit de vie" series is a nice example of the bizarre results such a pinhole camera creates:

Dead Link Removed

Marco
 

walter23

Member
Joined
Sep 19, 2006
Messages
1,206
Location
Victoria BC
Format
4x5 Format
William Mokrynski's "Endroit de vie" series is a nice example of the bizarre results such a pinhole camera creates:

Dead Link Removed

Marco


What a weird kind of projection.
 

michaelbsc

Member
Joined
Dec 18, 2007
Messages
2,103
Location
South Caroli
Format
Multi Format
What a weird kind of projection.

I think it's because the film plane, or in this case the film cylinder, wasn't vertical.

Of course, had it been vertical, then the image wouldn't have included the arches, but would instead have been a bunch of pews. Perhaps there were scenes of both, and the pews turned out to be very uninteresting. Hard to know without asking.
 

polka

Member
Joined
May 1, 2008
Messages
167
Format
Medium Format
My own wide angle (anamorphic) pinhole cams

Me too, am a fan of this kind of pinhole cams !

Here, I published a paper about the three cams that I designed and built myself,

and here, (click on the picture) you may access a galerie with a few examples of photos I took with them :



My POLKa cams have an horizontal taking angle of about 300° (4 6x18 views per 120 roll), and on the displayed picture of the rialto bridge in Venise, you can notice on both ends the same windows from a building which was actually behind me.

At the end of the paper, I show also how to watch these weird perspectives so that they look normal.


Paul
 
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