on 28/10/02 6:25 am, gregg b. mc neill at gbmcne...@hotmail.com wrote:
> have you tried to put the filter inside the camera? I did thid with my red
> 25 when i shot IR
>
> gbmcneill
>>
>> I've been shooting B+W landscapes on a pinhole camera. To bring out clouds
>> I've been using a yellow fil
have you tried to put the filter inside the camera? I did thid with my red
25 when i shot IR
gbmcneill
I've been shooting B+W landscapes on a pinhole camera. To bring out clouds
I've been using a yellow filter behind the pinhole - in front would mean
than every speck of dirt is in focus. My
> > eradicate them. Any suggestions on keeping contrast in the sky without a
> > filter? Or alternatively how to use a filter without rendering every speck
> > of dirt?
I gave up on filters altogether, and just started shooting color film.
This allows me to adjust contrast and convert to greyscal
- Original Message -
From: "Jeremy Jeffs"
> I've been shooting B+W landscapes on a pinhole camera. To bring out
clouds
> I've been using a yellow filter behind the pinhole - in front would mean
> than every speck of dirt is in focus. My problem is that specks of dirt
cast
> a blur/shadow
Jeremy,
What I do is I hold the filter with my had in front of the pinhole and
keep moving through out the exposure. That way the dust is not in one
place long enough to record on the film.
James
On Saturday, October 26, 2002, at 12:10 AM, Jeremy Jeffs wrote:
I've been shooting B+W landsca
I've been shooting B+W landscapes on a pinhole camera. To bring out clouds
I've been using a yellow filter behind the pinhole - in front would mean
than every speck of dirt is in focus. My problem is that specks of dirt cast
a blur/shadow on the negs. I've tried vigilant cleaning but can't seem t