I made a curved plane pinhole camera out of black mat board based on Kurt Mottweiler designs from his page at http://www.cnsp.com/mdesign/ with take up knob technology from the cardboard Beseler camera. I placed a picture of it on the upload page at: http://www.p at ???????/discussion/upload/images/curved120.jpg. It makes 6 images on a roll of 120 each being about 4.5 inches long. It works well but I like the vertical coverage of my oatmeal boxes better. The curved 120 has no fall off so the effects is different then what you get from an oatmeal box or circular tins
gapicca...@aol.com wrote: > In a message dated 10/25/00 8:07:56 AM, pinhole-discussion-admin@p at ??????? > writes: > > << From: "William Erickson" <erick...@ic.mankato.mn.us> > Simple panorama camera can be made out of cardboard. Make one side flat = > and all the rest a half circle. >> > > I'm quite interested in the notion of curved film plane pano pinhole cameras, > but have not been clear about accessible ways to construct the curved film > plane. I've seen multiple examples. Any experience on 1) what's sufficient > for a mock-up, and 2) what is best without access to a sophisticated machine > shop? (presumably 2 different approaches) > > Giorgio Piccagli > Bent in San Francisco > > _______________________________________________ > Pinhole-Discussion mailing list > Pinhole-Discussion@p at ??????? > unsubscribe or change your account at > http://www.p at ???????/discussion/ -- Chris Peregoy | http://www.gl.umbc.edu/~peregoy | http://imda.umbc.edu/