thanks for the good ideas, everyone... will let you know what works...
pinhole has jumped from flexible to fluid!
jim k
- Original Message -
From: b2myo...@aol.com
To: pinhole-discussion@p at ???
Sent: Wednesday, December 12, 2001 3:10 PM
Subject: Re: [pinhole-discussion] pinholing
In a message dated 12/12/01 2:32:21 PM, pen...@rogers.com writes:
That'd be a pee-ing camera! A zoneplate or a pinhole made à la zoneplate
would prevent a stream of water coming out all the time through the pinhole.
I guess there would be some compression of the image due to the different
In a message dated 12/12/01 11:57:05 AM, aschm...@warwick.net writes:
btw...have you tried shooting on land with the camera full of water?
neat!
or developer (during shooting)
leezy
-discussion@p at ???
Subject: Re: [pinhole-discussion] pinholing underwater
- Original Message -
From: Andy Schmitt aschm...@warwick.net
ok Jim...I have to try it...Here I was thinking that I had to keep the
film
dry..silly me!!
No need to pre-wet the film before processing, that's
- Original Message -
From: Andy Schmitt aschm...@warwick.net
ok Jim...I have to try it...Here I was thinking that I had to keep the
film
dry..silly me!!
No need to pre-wet the film before processing, that's a bonus!
btw...have you tried shooting on land with the camera full of
at ???]On Behalf Of Kosinski
Family
Sent: Wednesday, December 12, 2001 10:40 AM
To: pinhole-discussion@p at ???
Subject: [pinhole-discussion] pinholing underwater
I've been experimenting with underwater a bit using the paintcan cameras
because the plastic coating allows them to be filled with water
I've been experimenting with underwater a bit using the paintcan cameras
because the plastic coating allows them to be filled with water and other
liquids (even bw photo chemicals, you can develop the prints right in the
paintcan)...
after loading securing a black tape shutter over the pinhole I