1) low cost
2) 8x10 coverage
3) ease of construction
4) lack of 'distortion'
5) optical contrast and focus
It's okay if the resulting image quality is somewhat 'soft'.
Please share your experiences and building instructions.
I'm not interested in:
- pin hole lenses
- manufactured lenses
I made some 35mm portraits with such a homemade lens once and it
produced some interesting, soft and diffused images. You might try
improvising an f-stop to sharpen it up.
MM
View Camera magazine did an article about this a few issues ago. Call us at
800-894-8439 if you would like a copy
steve simmons
Cutting the plastic lenses is not all that easy. I think I might try
something like a soldering iron to melt the edges and then sand paper.
Don't know for sure.
Kirk
camar...@aol.com (CamArtsMag) wrote in message news:<20040630233721...@mb-m07.aol.com>...
> head for you your local drug store or Costco.
> Buy the cheapest reading glasses they have.
Two close-up lenses work well too - condition is irrelevant.
If you don't have a selection banging around in a box, well
then, get some: the more used, dusty, cracked and scratched
the better. A barrel can be made from a length of cardboard
tubing or black plastic pipe. Glue an aperture in the middle,
cut a slot(s) in the tube for a set of cardboard waterhouse
stops. Use a hat for a shutter.
Try 'sink strainer', 'wagon wheel' and other such apertures.
Performance will vary with lens spacing and stop position.
The use of two lenses clears up all of the distortion
and some of the aberrations.
You can do the same with a 35mm - use a close-up bellows
and a pair of +3's - results in a 167mm lens.
--
Nicholas O. Lindan, Cleveland, Ohio
Consulting Engineer: Electronics; Informatics; Photonics.
Remove spaces etc. to reply: n o lindan at net com dot com
psst.. want to buy an f-stop timer? nolindan.com/da/fstop/