Gregg Kemp gregg.kemp@??? wrote:
At 09:05 AM 7/11/2002 -0700, you wrote:
--- pinholeren...@netscape.net wrote:
I have been looking at the photo site PHOTOSIG for pinhole images can
find
only a few.I would love to see more pinhole zoneplate images
represented on
the site.I would
At 09:05 AM 7/11/2002 -0700, you wrote:
--- pinholeren...@netscape.net wrote:
I have been looking at the photo site PHOTOSIG for pinhole images can
find
only a few.I would love to see more pinhole zoneplate images
represented on
the site.I would like to know if any of the people on the
Give this guy a shout:
http://www.holgamods.com/snapdragon/
You might talk him into making one for you
Randy
_
Join the worlds largest e-mail service with MSN Hotmail.
http://www.hotmail.com
--- pinholeren...@netscape.net wrote:
I have been looking at the photo site PHOTOSIG for pinhole images can find
only a few.I would love to see more pinhole zoneplate images represented on
the site.I would like to know if any of the people on the list post images on
the site.lets get some
From: Chris Peregoy pere...@umbc.edu
What do you mean by three hole camera. I've made two hole stereo
cameras and a none hole multiple exposure 4x5 but I don't know of any
three hole, comercially availavle cameras.
Sorry for any confussion. I mean a multiple hole camera, all three
pinholes
I'm interested in purchasing a 3-hole 4x5 pinhole camera. Could someone
on the list suggest any sources(I'm checking eBay)? or would anyone have
plans to build one?
Has anyone been shooting with one before? Care to share results?
Thanks for your time, Andrew
I understand the behavior of VC paper, but my comments intended to deal with
the fact that the tonal range of brightly lit scenes exceeded the tonal
range of any paper. Ratcheting down the exposure time in such situations
would bring the highlights more into the tonal range of the paper, at the
William,
If you go to the Ilford web site, on the BW products page,
http://www.ilford.com/html/us_english/bw.html
you will find hiding somewhere towards the center of the page an Acrobat
document called CONTRAST CONTROL that deals with your question.
Basically, contrast on BW variable-contrast
Camera was an old Nikon F3 with a pie tin pinhole body cap. I used Fuji
Velvia and added 2 stops to what the cameras ttl meter read. There is just
enough light coming through to allow some limited framing through the
viewfinder but then you need to close it off before exposure. I took the