Huss
Member
Is this thread the most active one on Photrio? Anyone see the irony in that?


Is this thread the most active one on Photrio? Anyone see the irony in that?
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It's a very compelling format especially when paired with modern films & digitization techniques. It'll never happen, but you could imagine a bold camera manufacturer taking the guts out of a micro four-thirds body and adding a 16mm/110 film transport; same for APS-C/half-frame. On that topic, is anyone aware of a half-frame camera that would be capable of exposing the full panoramic width of 16mm film?
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My olympus fv and canon demi both have transports of the first type, which isn't ideal for 16mm panoramas. You can just use a regular 35mm camera for this... but I want a half-frame damnit
I'm halfway through a 25ft roll of Double 8mm in my Bell & Howell (Wollensak 8 Model 53). I don't have the means to cleanly split the film or scan it all intact so I'll probably opt for some ~10x14mm 'octariptych' stills.
There's a camera that transports the film vertically. Konica AA-35 I think.
Also, I use of of them cheap panoramic cameras that just has a crop mask for 35mm and shoot 16mm in it. Works great.
Yet another slick half-frame. After thinking about this for 5 more seconds its obvious why there isn't a half-frame with that gate/advance orientation: it'd never be able to properly expose a proper half-frame onto 35mm film.
My solution for 16mm panos in 35mm was to add some 'bumpers' to a 35mm cassette to maintain some sort of accurate alignment as the film is advanced.
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Edit: add 120 adapter end pieces from a chopped up 120 reel (also useful as a tool to wind film into the cart) and go ham.
On that topic, is anyone aware of a half-frame camera that would be capable of exposing the full panoramic width of 16mm film?
Bronson, I'm pretty sure @xkaes was saying "just crop" to get 16x24 pano out of your half frame camera. No sprockets, but hey, it's just like flipping the "panoramic" switch on a number 35 mm P&S cameras -- just masks the top and bottom of both frame gate and viewfinder.
Excellent examples Sergey. A Viscawide is on my wish list, but one costs more than I'm willing to pay for another camera at the moment. It'd surely be fun to experiment by adapting a close-up lens. What a mess that would be... the images might be pretty wild though.
My photography deed for the day:
View attachment 308581
Unnecessary? Sure.
Unwieldy? A little.
35mm equivalent FOV? You betcha.
(Modified Sony VCL DH0758 0.7x wide converter on 40.5->52->58mm rings)
Lithuanian Autumn by Sergey Kozlov, on Flickr
Landscape taken with VISCAWIDE-16.
Sorry for quality - it was very old expired film.
The optical geometry from panoramic cameras (like this, or Horizon, or FT-2, or Widelux) are rather different from cropping images. It is due to projecting image to the cylinder. So the stitching of several frames with rotating camera is much closer to them.
Sweet. Let's see it next to an SLR for scale.
This probably isn't a fair comparison but the F5 wouldn't fit in the frame
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This type of afocal converter lens (and others like it) were made for various 'old' digital cameras and can usually be acquired very inexpensively. A 58mm rear thread means you can adapt it to lots of lenses if desired. No mechanical vignette appears until about 24mm on full-frame... enough for a ~17mm FOV in that scenario.
Edit: It might even go a bit wider if I cleaned up the hack job around the rear element. I had to melt away a plastic standoff ring around the rear element to attach a normal 58mm step-down ring. It is definitely obscuring a couple of millimeters of the element around the edge.
Minolta 110 Zoom SLR Mk II, +1 exposure comp.
Vision3 50D in a 110 cart (100 ISO), ECN-2
w/ 0.7x wide converter
Macro mode, @~35mm zoom, f4
View attachment 308628
The frame spacing was better on this roll for some reason. There was some misalignment near the end, but the first half had almost perfect registration. Expose, advance, add lens cap, shutter, advance, shutter, advance, remove cap, expose.
View attachment 308629
The converter does add a lot of utility to the wide end of the lens. When in macro mode it puts closest focus at the 25mm setting at ~1/2 inch and ~1 1/2ft at 65mm, very much compressed compared to the default configuration. It weighs about half as much as the camera body (250g vs 450g) so the balance actually isn't too bad.
You seem a bit confused about the dimensions of half-frame panoramas though; the largest you can get is 18x16mm regardless of how you orient the camera.
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