Minolta XD11 SLR Pinhole Camera
Pinhole House
Exit 110
Groovy
Norris City Reservoir
Middle Sisters
1934 Plymouth Coupe
Rust Never Sleeps
The Clock Tower
All Stations West
1953 Cadillac Eldorado Convertible
Rust In Peace
Millennium Hotel
Pentax Sprocket Tree
Waterfall
Downed (Had Enough)
Bush
St. Louis International Airport
Chevrolet Style
I Am Kirok
Ozark City Lake
Kristina
Balloons and Kung Fu Panda
Harley-Davidson
Mercury
The Fog
Fall Leaves
1950 Jeepster
Star Trek - "The Corbomite Maneuver"
Pilot House
Backyard In Autumn
International Film Buying Day 2009
Kenny
Minion
Webb-Hay House
Fall Tree 2011
Raven
Santa Claus
The Artiste
Sue
The Baptist Children's Home
A Single Rose
Climbing Roses
The Ratcliff Inn
The Big Pelican
Light From A Window
1988 Ford Mustang
The Wetlands
1974 Chrysler New Yorker
1918 Ford Model T
Civil War Cannon
The Castle
Huey's Concessions
Last-Gen Ford Thunderbird
What A Way To Go!
Wild Grape Hyacinths
Crowd At The Balloonfest
Daffodil Bokeh
The Last Saucer
Remember The Alamo
Hot Wheels 1935 Caddy
Centuria 400
Hot Wheels Deora
Film Box Pinhole Camera Loaded
Ohio River
Spare
Never Laugh When The Hearse Goes By
Bicycle
Konica 1 to 4 Test
Mercury Blues
Country Roads Take Me Home
The Field At The End Of The Lane
Cold Beer In Kentucky
Keystone Stairwell
Tower Over N.C.
Touch The Panda
Covered Bridge
Sunrise
Permanent Vacation
See also...
alternative cameras ( lo-fi, polaroid, pinhole, key chain, toys etc)
alternative cameras ( lo-fi, polaroid, pinhole, key chain, toys etc)
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Take 4
This was my fourth attempt at getting a usuable image with my little homemade Kodak Trix-X film box pinhole camera. Finally, it worked! The frame was the average height of a regular 35mm negative, but the width turned out to be like a panoramic camera. I wasn't sure of the focal length, but the equivelant image I took with a digital camera translated to be 18mm. So, that would lead me to believe this film box camera was 18mm also.
I'm still not certain what is causing the little arc of exposed dots along the bottom of the frame. This glitch also turned up in the last shot I took with this camera, but that one had a different pinhole piece than this one, so it wasn't an imperfection in my pinhole. (Or maybe I recreated the exact same imperfection?) If anybody recognizes this aberration or what causes it, please let me know. I'd really like to be able to correct this and get one really good shot.
Camera: Film Box Pinhole Camera
Lens: Pinhole (approx .051mm)
Film: Kodak Tri-X 400 ISO black and white 35mm film
Exposure length: 2.2 secs.
Date: September 25th, 2010, 15:07:26 p.m.
Location: Fairfield, Illinois, U.S.A.
Developing specifics (chemicals at 68 degrees):
D-76: 7 mins.
Ilford Ilfostop stop bath: 1 min.
Kodak fixer: 8 mins.
Rinse: 5 mins.
Kodak Photo-Flo 200: 1 min.
I'm still not certain what is causing the little arc of exposed dots along the bottom of the frame. This glitch also turned up in the last shot I took with this camera, but that one had a different pinhole piece than this one, so it wasn't an imperfection in my pinhole. (Or maybe I recreated the exact same imperfection?) If anybody recognizes this aberration or what causes it, please let me know. I'd really like to be able to correct this and get one really good shot.
Camera: Film Box Pinhole Camera
Lens: Pinhole (approx .051mm)
Film: Kodak Tri-X 400 ISO black and white 35mm film
Exposure length: 2.2 secs.
Date: September 25th, 2010, 15:07:26 p.m.
Location: Fairfield, Illinois, U.S.A.
Developing specifics (chemicals at 68 degrees):
D-76: 7 mins.
Ilford Ilfostop stop bath: 1 min.
Kodak fixer: 8 mins.
Rinse: 5 mins.
Kodak Photo-Flo 200: 1 min.
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enjoying seeing all your cameras. i have a much smaller set, but many the same as you. i don't develop or print my own film anymore, so it isn't as easy to work with them, but do love it when i do!
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