I finally had some time to scan my first pinhole photos with my Zero 2000.
I shot photos of a friend of mine near my home. Would welcome suggestions
or comments.
http://www.???/discussion/upload/images_2001/cflagg_4.jpg
http://www.???/discussion/upload/images_2001/cflagg_3.jpg
In a message dated 11/9/01 12:34:21 PM, guy.glori...@sympatico.ca writes:
He would remove
the blindfold and process as usual.
He could never figure out why his films were totally fogged...-:))
LOL
thanks
leezy
Being able to build a back that accepts film holders instead of having to
reload in the darkroom or changing bag after each exposure..
andy
-Original Message-
From: pinhole-discussion-admin@p at ???
[mailto:pinhole-discussion-admin@p at ???]On Behalf Of Guy Glorieux
Sent: Friday,
George L Smyth wrote:
I use 4X5 and 8X10 all the time. The advantage is that you can use film
holders to swap the film out, so shooting is not a one shot deal.
Hi George,
I'm not sure I understood that one. What do you mean by swapping the film
out,
so that shooting is not a one shot deal?
Any one use b/w sheet film that uses 'conventional' developer instead of
paper negatives (other than lith/exotics) ?
If so, what kind? Maybe 4 x 5 film packs? Anything larger?
I use 4X5 and 8X10 all the time. The advantage is that you can use film
holders to swap the film out, so shooting
I've been thinking about a telescoping camera consisting of a 5-sided box
within a 5 sided box and who to have cut the wood for me...but you folks
keep reminding me that frugality is reality with a few letters changed...I
just got 3- 48x96 sheets of black Gatorfoam in at work, and there's bound
to