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Homebuilt LF cameras


bob_parsons

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Just curious as to how many of you, like myself, enjoy designing and building the large format cameras that we photograph with.

I build mine not from kits, but from scratch sometimes using components from other cameras such as filmbacks, monocular viewers etc.

Just curious as to how many other LF photmasochists are out there.

 

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Bob Parsons

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Tony, I know what you mean, but the awful truth is that you do not

know photomasochism until you have built your very own 4x17 pinhole

camera that uses what you think might be some kind of X-Ray film from

the former Soviet Union that you bought on ebay and have no idea in

the world how to expose or develop, and turns out to be completely

insensitive to any shade of green. That's masochism! (No, I haven't

done this, but my dad did. He's getting pretty good with that camera,

too!)

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hi bob

 

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i have been building a 8x20 camera off and on. this is the first

one i have built, it is inspired by the mandelette post card

cameras if the 1920s ( so i can load it up with a handful of

film/paper and store the exposed "stuff" without holders, and

without having to go back to a darkroom over and over again ..

 

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if you don't already know about this group, check out:

 

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http://rmp.opusis.com/pipermail/cameramakers/

 

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they make and use cameras too ..:)

 

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cheers

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Bob,

I know the feeling, I live and breath this stuff. If I don't have a

camera project to work on, I don't know what to do with myself.

Sometimes I think I'd rather play with equipment than take pictures.

After building a 12x20 monorail camera from scratch, I constructed a

4x5 super wide camera, complete with home-made bag bellows. I also

built an 8x10 Bender kit, but that's another story. I recently made a

rotating 11x14 back for the 12x20 and have ordered film that should

arrive by the end of this week. Between projects, I managed to put

together some web pages with details and pictures. You may be

interested, the URL is: http://home.earthlink.net/~samfidget/

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I've built a number of cameras but more than that have modified

or simply taken apart a whole bunch...my next adventure is

going to be trying to fix the shutter on an old folding polaroid

camera. I love screwing around with that kind of stuff. While I'm

at school, though, I don't have acces to a workshop, so I have to

content myself with drawing up plans (if anyone's interested, I've

recently drawn up pretty complete plans for a 5x7 field). One of

these days I plan on building a 7x17, but that won't be for a while.

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I am constantly amazed by how resourceful and mechanically proficient

the members of this forum are.

 

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I read many posts that go something like, "I was hiking when I found

that the neighbor's child had used a hole-puncher to aerate the

bellows on my 8x10, so I used some pebbles and a swizzle stick to

repair the thing in the field. It's better than new, now."

 

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I wish that I had that kind of ability, but I have a hard time

getting the plastic seal off of a jar of peanut butter, let alone

building LF cameras.

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Bob

 

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I think building cameras is just a natural extention of the craft of

LF and a lot of us build them to suit our tastes and wallets.

 

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I shoot panoramas and had to modify an enlarger to take the long negs

which are 2 x 13" long. Having done that I thought, why not a camera

to max out the enlarger which is 4x13. I dug out some 3mm cardboard

and leftovers from making bellows and other bits and taped and glued

a camera together, cost me just under $10 (already had a lens) and it

shoots incredible negs. I should point out here it's a single shot

point and shoot inspired by Gordon Marks Hobo.

 

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I'm also part way through building a giant swing lens camera, takes a

16 x 48" neg, should be finished later this year.

 

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The good thing about building your own gear is there's no

rules....build them to suit yourself.

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Robert,

 

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We are out there. I just built a 8x20 camera that takes Korona

holders. It has tested out fine and promises to be my spring/summer

workhorse. I'm not a master woodworker, but I did OK. If you don't

want something really fancy, building a view camera is quite easy. I

had ideas to improve my design the minute it was finished. I guess

I�ll have to build another one.

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I'm fiddling with things all the time. I've built several parts for

my 8x10 but the real challenge is a 16x20 my friend and I are

building this year. We started that project when someone gave him a

42" artar. I would guess that about half the large format users are

tinkerers in some form or another and that a fair share of the

established camera makers such as Wisner, Phillips, Canham et al,

started as builders of one offs to suit their own needs. It would be

interesting to here from some of them about why they started making

cameras.

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Bypassing the obvious? Building a camera is the easy part! Building

something to hold the film has got me daunted to the point that I

wouldn't bother with the easy part. I was in a junk shop the other

day and found a big box of 7X11, (half plate 11X14) and 6 1/2 X 8 1/2

(full plate) film holders and would've bought them to build a camera

around if the price had been fair (means really cheap). I'd build a

5X12 tomorrow if I could find holders! Building the holders is beyond

my fairly meager abilities. And prices for others to spend those

hours building them are equally daunting. Anybody seen a big box of

5X12 holders for sale? at a "fair" price?

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