It will be interesting to see how it performs in a "flare" situation.
In theory, the walls of the pinhole will be perfectly smooth so
the flare should be more regular (less random) than a traditional
pinhole. How thin is the metal the pinhole was drilled in? (I ask
this because the main reason for the "sanding a dimple" method
of drilling a pinhole is to thin the metal so that the walls of the
hole are as short as possible.)
Mike Vande Bunt
Larry Fratkin wrote:
> Jim,
> It was exactly like using other pinholes. The exposure always ends up
> taking 1/2 to 1 more stop than my calculator shows - reciprocity? It came in
> a nice plastic case with the size printed on it. The pinhole itself is
> mounted on a very sturdy ring.
>
> Larry
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Kosinski Family <zinski@telenet.net>
> To: pinhole-discussion@pinhole.com <pinhole-discussion@pinhole.com>
> Date: Tuesday, January 16, 2001 7:18 PM
> Subject: Re: [pinhole-discussion] New Pinhole Photo
>
> >Larry writes:
> >"I have my first laser pinhole picture published at
> >http://www.lenoxlaser.com/pinholephotography/pinhole_photography.html
> >
> >Pretty fine image, Larry. Was it as easy as it seems to use the laser
> >pinhole?
> >Jim K
> >
> >
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>
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Received on Wed Jan 17 02:28:46 2001
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