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digital pinhole gallery



 
 
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  #1  
Old April 10th 05, 02:51 PM
Marek (Wayfarer)
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Default digital pinhole gallery

I've just put some of my pinhole images on-line:

http://www.marekuliasz.com/pinhole/

Flowers and still life. There are shot with Canon EOS 10D with a camera
body cap pinhole. Pinhole purists may not like them since I am adding,
at least in this portfolio, a dry brush filter in Photoshop. Anyway,
it's a lot of fun!

Marek
  #2  
Old April 10th 05, 05:21 PM
RRiddle
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I enjoyed the images very much, thanks for your post. It's a pleasure
to see digitally manipulated images that have subtlety, not looking
like an acid dream or an alien planet.

As far as technique - am I correct - you took the lens off of your
camera, and replaced it with a bodycap w/ pinhole? What was the light
source for your photos, exposure time, pinhole size?

  #3  
Old April 10th 05, 06:35 PM
Marek (Wayfarer)
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RRiddle wrote:

As far as technique - am I correct - you took the lens off of your
camera, and replaced it with a bodycap w/ pinhole? What was the light
source for your photos, exposure time, pinhole size?


Thanks for visiting.

I am using a standard camera bodycap with a pinhole installed. I made my
pinhole lens years ago using one of predrilled pinhole plates I had. I
was playing with pinhole shots using 4x5 graflex camera at that time. I
believe I used a pinhole size optimal for 50 mm focal length: ~0.25 mm.

All flowers shots were made using light from a standard desktop lamp, a
small flashlight plus some white boards and/or gold reflector. Exposure
time was from 10 to 30 seconds. In the case of a digital camera it is
easy to experiment with the exposure by checking the image on a display
after each shot and/or histogram.

I have one pinhole picture of an old shool building (pinhole books page)
shot with a natural light just before sunset with exposure time of 4
seconds.

Marek
http://www.MarekUliasz.com
  #4  
Old April 10th 05, 06:35 PM
Marek (Wayfarer)
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

RRiddle wrote:

As far as technique - am I correct - you took the lens off of your
camera, and replaced it with a bodycap w/ pinhole? What was the light
source for your photos, exposure time, pinhole size?


Thanks for visiting.

I am using a standard camera bodycap with a pinhole installed. I made my
pinhole lens years ago using one of predrilled pinhole plates I had. I
was playing with pinhole shots using 4x5 graflex camera at that time. I
believe I used a pinhole size optimal for 50 mm focal length: ~0.25 mm.

All flowers shots were made using light from a standard desktop lamp, a
small flashlight plus some white boards and/or gold reflector. Exposure
time was from 10 to 30 seconds. In the case of a digital camera it is
easy to experiment with the exposure by checking the image on a display
after each shot and/or histogram.

I have one pinhole picture of an old shool building (pinhole books page)
shot with a natural light just before sunset with exposure time of 4
seconds.

Marek
http://www.MarekUliasz.com
 




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