Stanford Multi-Camera Array

This sort of leads on from the last post, thinking about multi image cameras I was reminded of this project i came across a while back :
Stanford Multi-Camera Array

This is a very cool research project, its a massive array of 128 ccd video cameras that work together to capture a scene in 3D to be process by a computer.

Just the ticket for “matrix” style panning effects, high-res and high speed capture (with a bit of wobble) but my favorite bit is “synthetic aperture photography”.

as the site puts it:

the cameras are arranged 2 inches apart and aimed so that their fields of view overlap completely about 10 feet from the array. This arrangement simulates a single camera with an aperture 3 feet wide, allowing us to see through partly occluding environments like foliage and crowds.

There is a link to a 5 minute video near the bottom of the page that shows what the array is capable of. You can see the different 3D effects as well as how they can view “through” obstacles!
Also the Flash-based light field viewer is well worth a play too.

While Im mentioning a Stanford site, its worth noting that http://pinhole.stanford.edu/ is an interesting general resource for pinhole stuff, including dimensions for building a Foamcore 5×4 camera.

About, above

detail of camera obscura (with direct sunlight in late afternoon)Image by cicadas

I found this page today and thought it would fit in well here.

its about an exhibition that was shown in Banff, Australia last year called “About, above”. It featured an impressive camera obscura starmap, constructed from holes (in the pattern of they Milky Way) drilled in a sheet of mdf over the window of a darkened room, the result is some very interesting images. Looks like it would have been amazing to see in place.

its kind of reminded me of Christopher bucklow’s Guests series.

This has got me thinking about multi-hole pinhole cameras now!

Letterbox Pinhole camera

So a thought occurred to me a few days ago…a camera obscura is usually built by placing a small aperture over a window and blocking out all other light. the result is an upside down and back to front view from the window,faintly projected onto the opposite wall.
On a bright day it can be very impressive once your eyes adjust, essentially the room is turned into a giant pinhole camera pointing out the window. so just like a pinhole camera you can cover the inside of it with photo paper and make paper negatives.

Buy hey, your window is made of glass for a reason, and your covering it over on a bright sunny day.


So to get back to the point of this post: I thought,why not use the front door instead…its usually closed and you cant normally see through it apart from the peep hole and the letter box….

while the peep hole might be interesting for other projects (like a cheap fish eye lens), it occurred to me that the letter box is the perfect pinhole mount, it even has a shutter of sorts!

I blacked out all doorways, the windows above doors, and taped around the front door. then wedged open the letter box and covered it with a hole cut in a piece of mat board

3 sheets of 12×16 Ilford photo paper ( pre-flashed using a filtered vivitar 283 flash) stuck to the wall opposite the front door were exposed for about 2hr 40min

I hope to scan these soon, but for now here’s a digital photo of the negs, inverted in photoshop and overlayed on a photo taken out of the letterbox.

I am pretty happy with the result, its nearly life size but a bit fuzzy and faint. With a slightly smaller aperture and an even longer exposure (all day?) it could look really good.

I recently got a fresh pack of paper and plan to continue this project, hopefully ending up with a wall sized mural, using many different exposures. I also thought that it could be interesting to try using colour paper in a few places on top of the black and white.

keep and eye out for progress

Something begins

ok, so everything starts somewhere, it might as well be with a first post! So here is my reasoning behind starting this:

My Main site pjwphoto.net is deliberately fairly formal. It’s there to keep a portfolio available without all the experiments and work in progress cluttering the place up

I already have an account on flickr as Printedsilver, where i upload pretty much everything that is scanned or digitised, but this means that it becomes incoherent and disorganised. Especially as I’m not very good at adding proper descriptions and tags. After a while the format feels constricting and something more is needed.

I hope that this blog will become a place for compiling all the ideas and experiments that lead me through photography. If its interesting or useful to anyone else, then even better!

Until then, wait and see what happens…

pete