Experimenting with pinhole camera technology. The negative was created in the pinhole camera, the contact print was produced in the bathroom darkroom we setup. We went low-tech and did the print drying along with the fresh laundry.
Train in Zurich station, taken with my Polaroid pinhole camera. (Taken with instagram)
Polaroid Pinhole Camera Recipe
View of Zurich with my Polaroid pinhole camera. Scanned with an Epson then processed with Plastic Bullet and instagram.
Pinhole camera and first images. Heading to Zurich for some pinhole fun. (Taken with instagram). Also processed with Plastic Bullet.
Assembled Polaroid pinhole camera. (Taken with instagram) Polaroid (from Mamiya M645) back and pinhole body taped together. Black tape for the shutter. Also processed with Plastic Bullet.
Polaroid back and pinhole body before taping together. Black tape for the shutter. (Taken with instagram) Polaroid back (from Mamiya M645) and Fujifilm FP-100c, also processed with Plastic Bullet.
FujiFilm FP-100c arrived for my pinhole camera. (Taken with instagram) Processed as well with Plastic Bullet.
Getting the camera body ready for my experiments in Polaroid Pinhole camera building. I picked up a tin foil camera body and spray painted the inside black to reduce internal reflections. Taken with a Sony A900, processed in Plastic Bullet and instagram.
I’m designing a pinhole camera for some 6th graders to discover photography with. So I took apart the Polaroid back from my Mamiya 645 camera to easily use the Polaroid/Fuji film. Well, since Polaroid is basically dead I’m probably going to use Fuji film.








