barrel lens

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I have read about people using barrel lens in cameras like speed graphic or sinar that has an auto shutter.Iwonder if there is other method to use barrrel lens. Any input will be greatly appreciated.

-- Robert Choi (audia8@west-teq.net), August 07, 1997

Answers

for longer exposures (a few seconds and more) you just remove the lens cap and replace it. long exposures are really not that uncommon in large format photography. if you look for example at john sexton's work you'll see that almost all his exposures are several seconds to several minutes long. even in daylight with slow film and a nd filter it's easy to get there.

for studio work with flash you could make sure the scene is dark enough, remove the lens cap and fire the flash manually.

-- Quang-Tuan Luong (luong@ai.sri.com), August 11, 1997.


I used barrel mount lenses exclusively on my 8 x 10 Deardorff. I installed a Packard shutter inside the camera and routed the air pipe out the side, well lightproofed. The shutter had a pin that would operate at 1/25th when pushed in. Pulled out it was "B" there was also a set of sync contacts for X sync. Worked fine.

-- Tony Brent (ajbrent@mich.com), September 11, 1998.

for longer exposures (a few seconds and more) you just remove the lens cap and replace it. Take a Kodad box (one part of the thre part filmbox) not the lanscap and you dont move the camera

-- Friedrich M. Schmidt DGPh (Friedrich.Schmidt@physik.uni-muenchen.de), May 03, 2001.

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