- Joined
- Sep 2, 2006
- Messages
- 212
- Format
- 35mm
I'm interested in building a film testing camera that allows me to take consecutive shots on different film types. Without buying multiple cameras or multiple camera backs (both very expensive) I was wondering if anybody had any suggestions on how to build a camera that would allow me to shift between cameras easily. I don't need a viewfinder to accurately compose and I would like to use 35mm for efficacy.
I was wondering if it would make sense to build a single camera that had a shifting back or to just build separate backs that could hold the with a dark slide? Also I was wondering whether there was any cheap cameras or camera backs I could purchase that I could use as 'components'.
I don't mind spending about £20 per camera (and it would be fine to swap the lenses)
The alternative is just to buy multiple cameras but I don't know what the cheapest, reliable 35mm film camera that I could buy 10-20 of would be?
Couldn't work out which forum to put this in but it's fundamentally about testing film so this made sense..
Tim
p.s. I should have been clearer. I want to test the films "photographically". I've done this before but using graphmatic backs on my Ebony but 5x4 film gets expensive. The idea is that I can make each consecutive image without the conditions changing too much.
Here's a test I've done previously for colour film https://www.onlandscape.co.uk/2011/06/colour-film-comparison-pt-3/
I was wondering if it would make sense to build a single camera that had a shifting back or to just build separate backs that could hold the with a dark slide? Also I was wondering whether there was any cheap cameras or camera backs I could purchase that I could use as 'components'.
I don't mind spending about £20 per camera (and it would be fine to swap the lenses)
The alternative is just to buy multiple cameras but I don't know what the cheapest, reliable 35mm film camera that I could buy 10-20 of would be?
Couldn't work out which forum to put this in but it's fundamentally about testing film so this made sense..
Tim
p.s. I should have been clearer. I want to test the films "photographically". I've done this before but using graphmatic backs on my Ebony but 5x4 film gets expensive. The idea is that I can make each consecutive image without the conditions changing too much.
Here's a test I've done previously for colour film https://www.onlandscape.co.uk/2011/06/colour-film-comparison-pt-3/
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