mbeacom wrote:
Hi-
There is another direction for digital pinhole cameras- steal some
tricks from the Astropohographers. They have a similar problem- they
need long exposures to gather up enough star light to make an exposure.
And many of them are using digital cameras. They get past the noise
problem by cooling the CCD chip, and stacking many exposures together.
It is a B&W camera. Want color? Just make a red exposure, a green
exposure and a blue exposure...
the cooling is needed due to the CCD property of capturing not only
light but also heat. in long exposures they may get moisty.
that property explains why we have so many CCD cameras with night shot
around.
"monkeying around with equipment", as William EricKson said, may violate
the orthodox pinholing life but, IMHO, excluding the digital world from
imaging and pinhole photography is to live in a cave without coming out
to enjoy the trees (although looking from inside of a cave is the
fundamental pinhole experience).
;-)
luish
btw. I tried the scan experience but it will only work with a
transparency adapter so the software may be fooled and will turn the
scanner's light off and read the projected light from the pinhole.
--
-----------------------
http://www.ignore.com.br