Hi Zami,
Sorry for the late reply.
The pinholes are 55 mm f 166 with a pinhole diameter of about 0.33 mm
and a 105 mm f 318.
Actually I prefer zone plate 35 mm photography, I don't like 35 mm
pinholes (At least I don't like mine).
I'll keep using the 4x5 cameras with pinhole. I transformed the 35
Readyloads. See at www.calumetphoto.com
- Original Message -
From: Catherine Just blue_medic...@yahoo.com
To: pinhole-discussion@p at ???
Sent: Wednesday, October 16, 2002 11:56 AM
Subject: [pinhole-discussion] 4x5 film
hi,
after using 4x5 film holders with my pinhole while
Kurt, you would have to order a copy from Proquest
Renee
Hi:
Salt printing is one of the easiest alternative processes - (cyanotype is
the easiest)
One of the best books on salt printing (and albumen printing) is
The Albumen and Salted Paper Book by James Reilly - its out of print but
is available online as a web page at:
On Wed, 16 Oct 2002, Catherine Just wrote:
hi,
after using 4x5 film holders with my pinhole while
traveling, I am very interested in the film that is
already in a holder. I can't remember the name of it.
I think you are referring to the readyload packs from Kodak.
I use TMAX ones for
Okay, time to look this up!
http://www.towson.edu/~sweeting/wg/candywww.htm
Fascinating study on triboluminescence... includes
photos (somehow stays on topic?).
John Moore
Ramona, CA
--- erick...@hickorytech.net wrote:
I think I remember that the general technical term
for the phenomenon
The film type is referred to as 'quickload' or 'readyload', depending on
the manufacturer, and generally comes in b/w, color neg and color
transparency. It fits a 4x5 Polaroid back and functions similarly to
Polaroid sheets in the way the paper functions like a dark slide. It's
much more
hi,
after using 4x5 film holders with my pinhole while
traveling, I am very interested in the film that is
already in a holder. I can't remember the name of it.
does anyone have information about what I am trying to
describe???
So instead of having to load the film into a holder
you can buy a
I think I remember that the general technical term for the phenomenon we're
talking about is piezoelectric.
- Original Message -
From: Tom Miller twmil...@mr.net
To: pinhole-discussion@p at ???
Sent: Wednesday, October 16, 2002 8:57 AM
Subject: Re: [pinhole-discussion] 1: Is This Nuts?