Despite the fact that he doesn't need another pinhole camera, Joe builds a wide-angle 4x5 camera that accepts cut film holders, for the purpose of shooting landscape images onto sheet film.
Hey joe, ive finished my build and successfully took photos for my university project, i want to thank you for answering my questions😊 The photos came out way better and sharper than i expected and im extremely impressed, thank you again
Hello joe, im attempting to build this camera for a university project, i do not own a film holder and i want to find a way to insert a photosensitive paper directly in the camera (inside a darkroom) and--> expose and then develop back at the dark room, any ideas as to how i can alter this specific design so that it works without a film holder and is still completely light proof?
How much to build one just like this but with an added tripod socket for portrait orientation? This is one of your best builds yet and I would seriously want to invest in one
I didn't realize how much I missed your build videos. Nice job. Simple build techniques and just using scrap materials. Perfect! What is the app are you using?
I’d never thought of making a wide angle pinhole. I have made a pinhole lens board for my Graflex Speed Graphic, and I’m waiting for a sunny day to test it out!
Pretty cool. Considering my fascination by the technology of bygone eras and that I am a novice photographer, I may want to delve into pinhole photography someday. Sadly, my budget will not allow any more hobbies right now.
I find your creativity and inventiveness refreshing, Joe! Your idea of placing the filter internally is a great way to control flare. I have a series of 10 or so square plastic filters that could be placed internally, to improve my black and white paper and film negatives. Thanks for making use of your scrap wood pile! Your creativity has inspired us all.
An internal filter is an excellent opportunity idea, Joe! That eliminates so many quality issues! I'll try that too, using some 2+2 inch filters I have on hand. Thanks!
Wow thats an awesome camera. I had just started building a 4x5 wide pinhole camera myself, but this design made me start all over. Your ideas are as always brilliant. Thanks for another great video, and by the way, love when you shoot in your world famous backyard :-)