Can I make a pin hole camara out of a Hasselblad 500cm ??

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Romanko

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Yes, you can. You can buy laser-cut pinholes. These have known focal length and f-number, unlike the ones you make yourself.

You might want to watch Martin Henson's recent video on Youtube where he converted an old plate camera to a pinhole.

There is a number of ways to mount pinholes to you camera, including gluing the pinhole to a camera body cap, using macro bellows or some sort of a lens adapter.

Use the film you are most familiar with. Knowing the f-number of the pinhole you should have no problem calculating
the exposure time. It is important to compensate for the reciprocity failure since your exposures are likely to be long.
Framing could be challenging. Using a normal lens of the same focal length as the pinhole is one option. An external viewfinder or a viewfinder app for a mobile phone could also be used.

While it is totally possible to turn you Hassy into a pinhole camera, a much simpler folder or even box camera would produce the same results (possibly for the price of a Hassy body cap). Good luck with your project.
 

MARTIE

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cowanw

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Custom Camera Building.
 

xkaes

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You can get or make pinhole body caps, but that restricts you to one focal length -- the distance from the pinhole to the film. If you want to use different focal lengths, you'll need pinholes of different sizes (diameters) and you'll need a way to change the distance between the pinhole and the film -- extension tubes, helicoids, bellows, etc.

http://www.subclub.org/fujinon/pinhole.htm
 

Donald Qualls

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you'll need a way to change the distance between the pinhole and the film

I've also seen conical body caps for some lens mounts, specifically for pinhole use -- these let you recess the pinhole inside the body.
 

Sirius Glass

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MARTIE

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I use a cable release with a lock. Once triggered, the mirror lifts up and the baffles open just like using the 'bulb' setting.
 

KinoGrafx

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There’s at least one pinhole design out there that skips the. ‘Blad body altogether and just uses the back
 

Hassasin

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Yes, you can. You can buy laser-cut pinholes. These have known focal length and f-number, unlike the ones you make yourself.

Any pinhole, commercial or home made, has its focal length and takes no effort to figure out what it is. Neither is precise measurement of pinhole, needed for focal length calculations, by use of either a scanner or microscope.
 

MattKing

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Yes, you can. You can buy laser-cut pinholes. These have known focal length and f-number, unlike the ones you make yourself.

Any pinhole, commercial or home made, has its focal length and takes no effort to figure out what it is. Neither is precise measurement of pinhole, needed for focal length calculations, by use of either a scanner or microscope.

FWIW, the pinholes themselves have neither a focal length or an f/number.
They do have a size of hole though.

So there are two approaches:
1) if you start with a pinhole of a particular size, you can calculate from that size what hole to sensor/film plane distance - essentially a focal length - will optimize the resolution you can obtain in the image. Once you have that distance, you can adapt/modify an existing film transport mechanism (i.e. a camera body) to the hole to the sensor/film plane distance you need for optimal results, and then calculate from that what your effective aperture is in f/stops; or
2) if you start with a particular or approximate hole to sensor/film plane distance - which seems most likely to be your situation as you are attempting to make use of an existing camera body - then you can calculate from that distance what size hole you need in your pinhole to optimize resolution, and then in turn calculate from that what your effective aperture is in f/stops.
 

paul ron

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a body cap on almost any camera can be used to make a pin hole camera.
 
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