Fiber Fool

Follow the feats and foibles of a fiber fanatic.

More About Pinhole Photography…

Filed under: Photography — Kristi at 3:47 am on Wednesday, April 29, 2009

So, Amanda asked me to post a pic of my pinhole camera in the comments of my previous post. So, today I share what we did in the workshop and also some links that will give you more info if you want to try it on your own.

My First Pinhole Camera

This is the outside view of the pinhole cameras we built in the workshop. They were made from a standard shipping box purchased probably at an office supply superstore. It is roughly the size of a very thick trade size paperback. Before assembly we spray painted the inside black to keep light from bouncing around inside of the camera body and muddying the image. We also used black electrical tape to cover any holes from assembly or perforations to make the box light tight. We did not tape the flap shut until the box was loaded with the photo sensitive paper though.

Pinhole Camera Inside

We also cut a 3/4″ square hole out of the center of the box bottom and compressed the edges down before attaching the actual pinhole. The pinhole was created using a piece of thin aluminum from a soda can (most of the people running the workshop used brass in their cameras). The hole was punched using a needle. We weren’t really given specifics but I heard a “size 10 beading needle” passed around in conversation. The bump created by punching the hole was then sanded down carefully with 400 grit sandpaper to fine tune the hole size and create cleaner edges to the hole so that the image would be sharper. It was then attached to the box with the “bump” side facing towards the world. Again, black electrical tape was used. There was also a need for a shutter so that the paper would only be exposed to the scene you chose to photograph. To do that we took a piece of black electrical tape (yes, again) and folded over a tiny bit on one end to act as a “handle” of sorts and put the rest of the sticky part over the pinhole. The tape needs to stick to and all around the pinhole otherwise the camera will not be light tight!

Pinhole Camera "Shutter"

Next time I take this camera or some other pinhole camera out I will also place a small loop of tape to hold the shutter open as it is not uncommon to have rather long exposures and the tape “shutter” does not always like to stay open. To load the camera you must be in a dark room with safe lights and still expose the photo sensitive paper to the safe lights the least amount possible. We stuck our 4X5″ photo paper to a tape loop on the inside of the box top, closed the box and then sealed those edges as well with more electrical tape.

My First Pinhole Photo In my previous post I mentioned that I had a significant light leak in my first exposure. Well, things were rather rushed as this was a large workshop and only 6 people could be in the darkroom at a time so they threw together a second “darkroom” as a loading area in hopes of getting more people out taking pictures quicker. Things were kind of crazy and rushed and the one corner of my lid got missed by the electric tape in all the rush. The big “spray” of white originating from the lower right corner of that shot is a fantastic example of a light leak. I had a very slight one on my third exposure of the day as well (upper left) but it was located in such a way to not really detract from the photo very much.

After developing and fixing the photo paper we then had paper negatives. These are upside down and mirror images of what the camera was pointed at. They were then scanned into the computer, inverted and in the case of my final photo that contained words, flipped. I did do a bit of post-processing such as tweaking levels and contrast etc. but what I did was very minimal so as to stick to the nature of pinhole photography.

Pinhole Camera Paper Negatives

Pinhole photography is not for those who seek perfection. As I mentioned in my previous post, you kind of have to guess at the exposure times and if you have a partly cloudy day where shots are sometimes in full sun and sometimes in diffused sun it gets trickier. You also do not have a view finder so framing your shot is trial and error. If you stick with the same pinhole camera you do eventually start getting a sense of what the view will be.

The thing that struck me was the inability to stray far from the darkroom because you needed that to load the camera for another exposure. At least that is true with this sort of set-up. Drew did overhear a story about one pinhole photographer who had 30 cameras made from altoid tins and would load them and take them all out on a shoot. Some have also engineered cartridge systems similar to what Polaroids used (some even reusing old Polaroid cartridges). There are also instructions out there on making pinhole cameras that use film which would give you more freedom. Some photographers in attendance at this workshop mentioned they thought pinhole photography was the only way they’d work through their stock of left over 35mm film.

Some more interesting reading and inspiration:

Enjoy and be sure to stop back and share links to your experiments in pinhole photography in the comments!

World Pinhole Photography Day!

Filed under: Photography — Kristi at 8:53 am on Monday, April 27, 2009

Yesterday was World Pinhole Photography Day and to celebrate The Center for Fine Art Photography held a free workshop yesterday afternoon. The workshop was being run by Valerie Burke, Micheal Butts, and Mark James with help from several others whose names I did not catch.

Pinhole photography has been something that I’ve always wanted to try, but never have taken the time to do. A workshop seemed like a great chance to get my feet wet. Both DH & I attended and got to build our first pinhole cameras, take a few shots to photosensitized paper, and develop them to produce paper negatives.

My First Pinhole Photo

My first shot really didn’t work. I wasn’t thinking black and white when I set it up. I had no reference for the field of view (hence catching a car bumper and a bike in my frame) and I had a pretty severe light leak. It did turn out well enough that I learned from the shot and the following shots each improved.

My Second Pinhole Photo

It was tricky to set up shots because there is obviously no view finder. It was also a challenge to figure out the right exposure. My first shot was under exposed by a lot. Each shot I took I dialed in a bit better - at least close enough that I could adjust a bit while developing the photo in the darkroom. It was just lucky that overall the lighting yesterday was semi-steady due to some pretty serious cloud cover. It did mean exposure times were nearing 30 seconds.

My Third Pinhole Photo

My favorite shot is the final one, taken of the view of the building where the workshop was held as seen from the N College Ave sidewalk. Both DH and I were bit pretty good by the bug and now talking about what would be required to be able to develop pinhole images at home!

My Final & Favorite Pinhole Photo

The Birthday Bash At Martha er… Mary Ann’s

Filed under: Fibery Friends — Kristi at 3:33 am on Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Here Eggy, Eggy, Eggy

Mary Ann kindly hosted the Aries Baby Bash yesterday. Lucky for me she lives just a few blocks away so I donned my iPod and walked over (stupid me - had to hitch home because of too many gifts). She went all out. She accepted little help from anyone and had the most incredible feast and fun activities for us all. She kicked it off with an egg hunt! It was one day after Easter after all…

Early Spring Blooms in Mary Ann's Garden

Each of us had ten eggs to find that were coded with stickers. This meant we all got the same sorts of things in our eggs. No one got more chocolate than anyone else, thus avoiding any vicious fights over eggs. She knows us all too well, LOL! It was fun being a kid again and hunting those eggs. Plus, it was a great excuse to roam her gorgeous yard and garden. Granted, it is early spring and it wasn’t at its peak of beauty, but there were a few blooms that made an appearance for the festivities.

Crocus

Chocolate Chiffon Cake with Whipped Cream & BerriesThe great spread of wonderful breads, deviled eggs, spanikopita, salad and fruit salad wasn’t all we had to eat either. She baked TWO BIRTHDAY CAKES! A carrot cake which I was told was to die for. Even a self-proclaimed chocoholic opted for seconds on that rather than trying the chocolate chiffon with berries cake. I’m not a fan of carrot cake (I know, the horror - I’m leary of nuts in baked goods) but the chocolate chiffon with berries was phenomenal! That said, I haven’t had a cake made by Mary Ann that wasn’t. I’m not a coconut person either and I loved her German chocolate cake she made for birthdays a few months back.

Birthday Carrot Cake

Hand Felting Weekend

Filed under: Photography, Fibery Friends, Felting — Kristi at 5:19 pm on Monday, April 13, 2009

Button Journal Closure

Today was the monthly birthday gathering for the Monday afternoon (and sometimes Wednesday) knitting group I go to. April seems to be a very popular month for babies. I have several relatives with birthdays within a week of mine. In college and high school I had several friends who fell into that range as well. And, this knitting group is no different! There were four of us (three of us in attendance). So, I had to pull together something to gift my fellow Aries babies.

Felted Moleskein Covers

I decided on felted notebook covers. The one I made for the holiday exchange was a huge hit and the cause of some fights. Since I did not know if any of these women journal or use sketchbooks I thought a smaller, purse-friendly version would be more universal of a gift. So, I got a 3-pack of the small kraft moleskine journals and made covers for those. They too seemed to be a hit.

First Moleskein Cover Second Moleskein Cover Third Moleskein Cover

The photo at the top of the post used one of my new birthday toys - a +4 close-up filter :-) Thanks Mom and Dad!

For more fun felting blog posts, check out this week’s Fiber Friday at Alpaca Farm Girl’s Blog!

Great Intentions…

Filed under: Knitting, Photography, Apparel, Designing — Kristi at 5:31 pm on Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Snowy Canal

Well, I thought I was way ahead on my new design because of the snow we got on Saturday (see pics above and below). But it seems it made me a bit cocky to have completed my bust short rows by day’s end on Sunday. As I went to my various knitting engagements on Monday I was thinking I had a great chance at being done by the end of this week (as in Friday, not Sunday - Sunday *may* still be doable).

Snow On Fence Because of the snowiness most of the weekend was spent indoors (aside from photographing), often watching television of movies. Saturday we had a John Hughes double feature of The Breakfast Club and Weird Science. Movie and/or television watching means much progress for me. Oddly, I seem to knit faster if I have that distraction.

Now, why am I not going to be done on Friday even though I was past the bust on Sunday night before bed? Well, because I jumped almost immediately into the waist decreases upon finishing the short rows. I didn’t stop to ponder that a). because this is a close fitting tee the armhole depth is not that of past sweaters and b). this is a finer gauge yarn which means more rounds per inch. When I got home Monday night from SnB and finally moved it to waste yarn to try on I discovered I had finished all my waist decreases, yet hadn’t quite cleared my bust…

Emma Ponders Her Next Leap

I frogged about 2 inches, back to the end of the short rows. I was able to regain about an inch of that on Tuesday evening and another inch this afternoon. I will be starting the decreases for the second time this evening. I think my waist will land at my waist this time. I know I’m *very* short-waisted, but not quite as short as attempt number one was, LOL! I should have pondered my next leap like Emma did in the snow.

Snow On Fence

An important lesson was learned, however — when you are knitting top down so that you can knit to fit, try it on often. Don’t get lazy and make assumptions. I would have saved much time (and grief and frustration) if I had just taken the time to try it on at the end of the short rows instead of just plowing ahead.

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