Jump to content

image circle confusion


lukas_werth3

Recommended Posts

Recently I took an architectural picture with my 240 Dagor of my 8x10", and I raised the lens as much as I thought possible. I seem to have moved it out of the image circle, but not at the top of the picture (the ceiling) where I would have expected it, but at the bottom (the floor), which should have been well coverec with a lens rise - or at least I thought so.

Can somebody explain this to me?

 

<p>

 

Lukas

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When you raise the lens on a view camera, you are raising the cone of

projected light exiting the rear of the lens and moving it up as well.

Since the image is inverted on the ground glass, the ceiling being down

and the floor up, so to speak, if your circle of coverage is

insufficient, vignetting (starting at the corners) of the lower part of

the ground glass image, in this case the ceiling, should become

noticeable. This is exactly opposite of what you report. Is the

cutoff straight across? Do your bellows sag? If you did a substantial

rise and the bellows were sagging enough, they could actually crop the

image on the gg and the film. And guess which part of the image would

it would crop? That's my guess, bellows sag. You're using a

relatively short lens and if you have a lot of bellows and they're

super flexible, they are probably hanging down in the line of fire.

Let us know if this is the case!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Could be that you moved the lens so much that the bellows was

interrupting the light path. As you move the lens up, the bellows sags

, and it's quite easy to get the top side of the bellows in the

way.<br>If the 'vignetting' is a ragged line across the bottom of the

picture, then this is almost certainly what happened. If it's a

circular vignette, then it's still a mystery.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thank you for your answers, they helped. The problem was indeed the

bellows, but as it may have some significance for other LF users, let

me shortly describe it:

I used the 240 (or 250??) mm Dagor on a Deardorff camera. The bellows

is replaced, but not at all sluggish. The lensboard on which the Dagor

is mounted was custom-made by a local carpenter, an it is a little too

thick to use the rise of the lensboard which the camera provides. In

the - in fact several - cases the problem occured, I had tilted the

camera somewhat - using the vertical format - and then set both

standarts vertical. This produced the cut-off described, which was

sharp, absolute, and SLIGHTLY ROUNDED, which let me astray, or I would

otherwise looked at the bellows myself first.

Well, the Deardorff bellows is cone-shaped, and in this extreme

position it does intrude somewhat between lens and image area at the

upper side of the camera. I could only detect this clearly after

sticking a small piece of white paper at the inside of the bellows in

order to locate its opsition by peeping through the cut corners.

It looks like I should be able to mend this problem through building

two brackets which lift the bellows somewhat in such extreme

positions - but this remains tricky, and needs careful checking in

every case.

 

<p>

 

Lukas Werth

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The usual solution, and the one that a lot of cameras have built-in,

is to gather up a portion of the bellows to effectively shorten

it.<br>This is done on my MPP by two little lugs attached to the

bellows about 1/3rd of the distance from the front. They fit to two

special spring clips on the front standard.<br>A couple of wire loops

stuck to the bellows with gaffer tape would serve the same purpose.

They could be designed to hook around the front of the camera in some

way. They needn't look too ugly, if you take some care in designing

and making them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...