this post was submitted on 01 Jun 2024
452 points (99.3% liked)
Photography
4519 readers
129 users here now
A community to post about photography:
We allow a wide range of topics here including; your own images, technical questions, gear talk, photography blogs etc. Please be respectful and don't spam.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I mean this in the most positive way... I don't believe you until you can show us how you did it
The image is lovely, but easily faked. I've been taking photographs with weird things for years and I still can't get my head around this.
Show and tell and you have my adoration.
I'll wait
Edit:
"> For sure.
It’s a canon Lide 30 scanner at its core. You have to remove the light source (a tiny RGB LED) and a pinhole array from the front of the sensor. Then I used a dremel to widen the slit the sensor looks through, to deal with some pretty severe vignetting. The optical assembly is made from foam board, gaffers tape and an acrylic lens liberated from a regular magnifying glass. I use a software called VueScan to perform the actual scan."
Yeah. That's pretty cool. Have the adoration you crafty fox.
I can imagine a focused lens projecting onto a white sheet on the scanner bed, then scanned. Pretty neat imo
The image is projected directly onto the scanner’s sensor. Using a ground glass plate would also work, but is not necessary for my technique.
It’s a delightful image, I love the texture, and the the technique is innovative.
Thanks!
(However, I like your idea, that seems like a cool way to make pictures)