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- Photo replaced on 22 Apr 2015
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Pinhole camera...


...made out of an old DSLR gear.
First things first, and thanks to Gisela Plewe for help and advertising Pinholeday.org, which takes place on next Sunday (April 26,2015).
I finally got my pinhole camera ready, made out of an old Olympus E450 that I have not used much ever since I started to use pocket cameras for daily shooting.
I first had big plans to make so called double slit pinhole camera. For that I tried to print two transparent slides with narrow "white" (transparent) lines on black background. However, it turned out the printers I had access to, did not print out slides black enough. Therefore I decided to go with an easy solution for the next Sunday, and use the traditional pinhole on a metal foil. For that I bought a yogurt can, which already had the other side colored black.
Next thing to do was drill a 2 mm hole onto a cap used to cover the (D)SLR camera lens mount opening, which is used when lenses are not attached to the camera body. Then with black duct tape, I attached the piece of metal foil onto back side of the cap. Finally I used an ordinary pin to "drill" a tiny hole onto the foil.
This is of course far from making an accurately calculated pinhole. Moreover, the problem with an "old" Four Third system DSLR is rather long minimum focal length, which is 40 mm if the foil is attached directly in front of the camera body. And because Four Third sensor is half from the full size 35 mm, it means the focal length corresponds 80 mm short telescopic lens.
Small sensor size also means poor quality and more blurriness compared to bigger sensors and large format cameras. Nevertheless, I find the outcome good enough. So, I'm ready for the challenge.
First things first, and thanks to Gisela Plewe for help and advertising Pinholeday.org, which takes place on next Sunday (April 26,2015).
I finally got my pinhole camera ready, made out of an old Olympus E450 that I have not used much ever since I started to use pocket cameras for daily shooting.
I first had big plans to make so called double slit pinhole camera. For that I tried to print two transparent slides with narrow "white" (transparent) lines on black background. However, it turned out the printers I had access to, did not print out slides black enough. Therefore I decided to go with an easy solution for the next Sunday, and use the traditional pinhole on a metal foil. For that I bought a yogurt can, which already had the other side colored black.
Next thing to do was drill a 2 mm hole onto a cap used to cover the (D)SLR camera lens mount opening, which is used when lenses are not attached to the camera body. Then with black duct tape, I attached the piece of metal foil onto back side of the cap. Finally I used an ordinary pin to "drill" a tiny hole onto the foil.
This is of course far from making an accurately calculated pinhole. Moreover, the problem with an "old" Four Third system DSLR is rather long minimum focal length, which is 40 mm if the foil is attached directly in front of the camera body. And because Four Third sensor is half from the full size 35 mm, it means the focal length corresponds 80 mm short telescopic lens.
Small sensor size also means poor quality and more blurriness compared to bigger sensors and large format cameras. Nevertheless, I find the outcome good enough. So, I'm ready for the challenge.
Dominique-Lucy Renson, Ulrich John, , .t.a.o.n. and 3 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Since I used ISO 800 indoors, there are plenty of noise in dark areas, which comes very visible when editing the image. That is what I hope to get rid of when shooting RAW. The LightZone software I use for editing seem to support Olympus RAW format, and therefore I think it could be a good idea to use in this case.
Normally I use just JPEG on my Panansonic Lumix.
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