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         Pinhole Photography:     more books (78)
  1. Pinhole/coronograph pointing control system integration and noise reduction analysis (BER report) by Michael Greene, 1981
  2. Pinhole photographs: [exhibition] February 4-March 1, 1986, Bertha Urdang Gallery by Marianne Engberg, 1986
  3. Pinhole Bodyscapes: Pinhole Camera Color Nude Photographs by George Arthur Lareau, 2010-07-13
  4. How-To Make Three corrugated 8x10 Pinhole Cameras: Wide-angle, Normal, Telephoto by Anita Chernewski, 1999-04-15
  5. Pin registration and masking: How to build your own pin registration system and how to make masks for photo composites by Tom Skrivan, 1989
  6. The Pinhole Camera: A Practical How-To Book for Making Pinhole Cameras and Images (Volume 1) by Brian J. Krummel, 2009-10-15
  7. The Visionary Pinhole by Lauren Smith, 1985-12
  8. I Spy Pinhole Eye by Philip Gross, 2009-10-07
  9. Imaging Beyond the Pinhole Camera (Computational Imaging and Vision)
  10. Camera Obscura by Abelardo Morell, Luc Sante, 2004-09-01
  11. Martha Casanave: Explorations Along an Imaginary Coastline by David Bayles, 2006-09-25
  12. One Room Schoolhouses of Arkansas As Seen Through a Pinhole by Thomas Harding, 1993-04
  13. Ocean Pinholes: Photographs by Darius Kuzmickas by Darius Kuzmickas, 2006-06-01
  14. La Vida Brinca

61. Pinhole Photography By Veijo Vilva
Veijo Vilva Pinhole Photography is a liberating, enlightening and educating experience. A photo taken with a Lenox Laser 300 micron Photo Pinhole at 70mm (f/233), mounted on a folding
http://galactinus.net/vilva/pinhole/index.html
Veijo Vilva
Pinhole Photography
is a liberating, enlightening and educating experience
A photo taken with a Lenox Laser 300 micron Photo Pinhole at 70mm (f/233), mounted on a folding 6x6 camera
The scanned frame size is 54mm x 54mm. The nearest, 31mm high chess piece was only about 85mm from the
camera, which is why it looks slightly soft. The far edge of the chess board was about 27cm from the camera.
Photography without Lenses
(this site is under construction) But Why? Why would anyone in their right mind start taking pinhole photographs which can never be really sharp, at least when taken with a reasonably sized camera? There is no single answer, different people do have their different reasons. Pinhole photography is great fun and it can be the most serious kind of photography. There is the freedom from vying for the latest and the greatest the industry has to offer, and the freedom from the delusion that technically ever more perfect equipment is required for great photography. There is also the satisfaction of still being able to use one's own creativity and craftmanship to the full, of designing and even building cameras which may be quite unique and individual, an essential part of the art. Pinhole photography is done with very simple cameras which instead of a lens have just a tiny hole or sometimes several of them through which light passes to the film. There are no adjustments to be made, usually there is no viewfinder, and the shutter may be fully manual.

62. Made In Poland: Contemporary Pinhole Photography
Invention of Pinhole camera. Ibn AlHaytham , an Islamic mathematician, astronomer, and physicist invented the pinhole camera around 1000 Gregorian Calendar and explained why
http://www.bostonpolishpinholephotography.com/pinhole.html
M ade in P oland:
c ontemporary
P inhole P hotography
An Exhibition of Seven Pinhole Photographers From Poland January 29 - March 4, 2007 CURATed by JESSECA FERGUSON
Invention of Pinhole camera
Ibn Al-Haytham ( Alhazen ), an Islamic mathematician, astronomer, and physicist invented the pinhole camera around 1000 Gregorian Calendar and explained why the image was upside down. Later around 1600, Della Porta reinvented the pinhole camera. Apparently he was the first European to publish any information on the pinhole camera and is sometimes incorrectly credited with its invention. pinhole camera is a camera without a conventional glass lens. It is a camera that uses a pinhole to form an image instead of a lens. An extremely small hole in a very thin material can focus light by confining all rays from a scene through a single point. In order to produce a reasonably clear image, the aperture has to be a small pinhole on the order of 0.5 mm (0.02 inches) or less. The shutter of a pinhole camera usually consists of a hand operated flap of some light-proof material to cover and uncover the pinhole. Pinhole cameras require much longer exposure times than conventional cameras because of the small aperture; typical exposure times can range from 5 seconds to hours or days.
The image may be projected on a translucent screen for real-time viewing (popular for viewing solar eclipses; see also camera obscura), or can expose film or a charge coupled device (CCD).

63. Pinhole Photography - Lenox Laser
The best quality pinhole photography supplies Laser Cut Pinholes, Shutters, and SLR Camera Caps. We also have Tips and Resources!
http://www.lenoxlaser.com/index.php?dispatch=categories.view&category_id=3

64. Pinhole Photography
Capture a more poetic aspect of your world with pinhole photography. Pinhole photography turns pictures into poetry. By taking away the lens and builtin shutter speeds
http://www.kodak.com/US/en/corp/inspirationalStories/pinhole_index.jhtml?pq-path

65. Flickr: The Pinhole Photography Pool
Pinhole Photography. Group Pool Discussion 6,883 Members Map Join This Group. Slideshow. From reiko+ From recolonrecolon. From recolonrecolon. From recolonrecolon
http://www.flickr.com/groups/pinholers/pool/

66. Pinhole Photography - GFXartist.com - Served Over 20,000,000 Artworks
GFXartist.com the best place to be a digital artist and to become one. Digital art resource. Digital art community
http://www.gfxartist.com/general/general_news/163823
member blogs general news saywhat!? poll ... interview Full news article Category:
Interviews and discussions
Publish date:
Submitted
by:
Millink
Published by:
TheNeverman
Comments:
Pinhole photography Joost (Millink) Mellink is very much into Pinhole photography, and would like to share his passion with fellow artists interested in this method of taking photos.
In short, a pinhole camera is a camera without a lens. A regular camera (with lens) spreads the light equally on the film, this way you get a nice sharp image within 1/30th of a second. A pinhole camera does this in slow motion…
Instead of using a lens, the pinhole camera use a very tiny hole to bundle the light, and spread it on your film. This way, all the false light gets excluded, and your film won’t get overexposed. Because the hole is so incredibly small (1 millimetre at max), not a lot of light ‘burns’ the film: about 20 times less than a normal camera. This requires a much longer shutter speed. A converted pinhole DSLR has a shutter speed of 30 seconds, instead of 1/60th of a second.
There is an advantage to this tiny hole:
Diaphragm is the keyword in pinhole photography. Where your standard DSLR has a diaphragm of 4-36, a large pinhole camera has a whooping 480! Diaphragm is nothing more then the relation between focus length and the diameter of a lens. And the ‘lens’ of a pinhole camera is amazingly small! No wonder the diaphragm is so high. Don’t underestimate this: with a diaphragm of 200, the photo is completely in focus! With pinhole photography, focusing is never an issue; the image is always focused. An important downside however, is that pinhole photo’s can never be as sharp as regular photo’s. Precise pinholes are hard or expensive to make, even in a perfect world; a lens just bundles the light a lot better. However, with a laser burned hole, and a good tripod, incredibly sharp photos have been made.

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