Darkroom317
Member
I know this has likely been covered to death but what would be a good pinhole size for 120 (6 x 7). Also, what would be the distance needed between the pinhole and the film plane?
Can you clarify? Do you mean aperture, as in f-stop, rather than the physical diameter of the pinhole?the diameter of the pinhole is (kind of) dependent on the distance from the film plane to the pinhole.
Ok, thanks. My guess is the numbers are off then
It gives a waring saying that the image circle will not cover the film. So,I moved the distance until it would.
Edit: The designer gave me a focal length of 50mm. I checked the distance in my plans an it comes out to 76mm. Which for 6 x 6 would be the same as 50mm on 35mm. The wizard is really confusing
I know this has likely been covered to death but what would be a good pinhole size for 120 (6 x 7). Also, what would be the distance needed between the pinhole and the film plane?
Ok, thanks. My guess is the numbers are off then
It gives a waring saying that the image circle will not cover the film. So,I moved the distance until it would.
Edit: The designer gave me a focal length of 50mm. I checked the distance in my plans an it comes out to 76mm. Which for 6 x 6 would be the same as 50mm on 35mm. The wizard is really confusing
Poorly stated again to the point of falsehood. A pinhole has no focal length, as it doesn't focus. It has a pinhole-to-film distance.for any given pinhole diameter there is a focal length
OK, I ran through some numbers ...
Typically a focal length equal to the diagonal of the film frame is provides a "normal" lens field of view.
Using the square root of the height squared plus width squared for a 6 x 7 frame comes out to about 9.3 cm = 93 mm for the frame diagonal dimension. The angle of view is about 53º.
Going into Pinhole Designer with a focal (pinhole to film distance) length of 93 mm, using 1.9, Rayleigh's constant, in the calculation, I get a pinhole diameter of 0.43 mm, which results in an effective aperture of f216.
If I use the constant of 1.6, which some folks use, I get a pinhole of 0.36 mm for f258...
You correctly referred to the angle of view, which is calculated from the negative-format diagonal and the focal length, but we need to make sure that we are not confusing it with the 'actual' angle of view, which is highly dependent on the thickness of the pinhole material and responsible for the image circle? (see attachment)
I would agree with you that DWThomas correctly describes 'angle of view' as a product of film size and pinhole-to-film distance.
I think it's misleading and confusing to also call the restriction of the light path by the thickness of the pinhole material the 'angle of view'. Why use the same term for two entirely different effects? In my view the effect of the pinhole material thickness would much more accurately be described as 'angle of coverage' if we're choosing terms analogous to lenses.
Lee
I agree with your calculations, but have a couple remarks:
There is such a thing as a Raleigh's constant, but it has nothing to do with Pinhole photography:
http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/21/39/53/PDF/ajp-jphyscol197132C1135.pdf
I think what you're referring to is simply the square root of the Airy disc's diameter (square root of 2.44 or 3.66, respectively). One maximizes sharpness (2.44). The other maximizes resolution (3.66).
You correctly referred to the angle of view, which is calculated from the negative-format diagonal and the focal length, but we need to make sure that we are not confusing it with the 'actual' angle of view, which is highly dependent on the thickness of the pinhole material and responsible for the image circle? (see attachment)
One popular magic constant is 1.9
...In truth, I'm in basic agreement with the idea that it's not necessary to calculate the stuff to death, just put something together and take some pictures. I view it a bit like cooking/baking without a recipe, sometimes it's fun to blur some boundaries!
Actually, even with zero thickness the pinhole appears elliptical from an off axis view; the finite thickness only increases the problem. In truth, I'm in basic agreement with the idea that it's not necessary to calculate the stuff to death, just put something together and take some pictures. I view it a bit like cooking/baking without a recipe, sometimes it's fun to blur some boundaries!
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: ![]() |