View Full Version : Looking for DIY projects....
Tim Kirkwood
May-22-2005, 07:47 AM
I have been looking for DIY projects to save some money. I cant afford to go out and buy anything I need for my camera. So I was wondering if anyone here had built anything for photography? Do you have pics of the process? Do you have links to where you may have learned how to do it?
One thing I have been looking into for now is the best way to make a ring light for some macro work. I have looked online and they are pretty pricey. Some of the continuous lighting ones are just little rings of LEDs but cost at least over $100.
Any ideas are appreciated!
Tim
Jekyll & Hyde
May-23-2005, 07:18 PM
One thing I have been looking into for now is the best way to make a ring light for some macro work.
TimJ: You might try building a mini softbox for a standard flash. Here's one I built for macros:
http://www.dgrin.com/showthread.php?t=7868
J&H
Tim Kirkwood
May-24-2005, 05:26 PM
J: You might try building a mini softbox for a standard flash. Here's one I built for macros:
http://www.dgrin.com/showthread.php?t=7868
J&H
Thanks J&H, nice job on the soft box.
I just finished building my homemade flash bracket. It needs a few more finishing touches before I can take a few pictures.
Thanks for the soft box ideas looks like you made yours for a 383. Thats what I have also so I can model mine from yours:D
Tim
DavidTO
May-24-2005, 05:29 PM
I found this PDF. (http://www.pictureperfect.co.za/bounce%20board.pdf)
DavidTO
May-24-2005, 05:43 PM
and this site. (http://www.xs4all.nl/~wiskerke/html/diy.html)
David_S85
May-24-2005, 08:34 PM
....and about 10 dozen other strange projects:
http://www.photoprojects.net
Then there's the wacko world of Philo and his LEGO Mindstorm robot photography accessories...
http://www.philohome.com
Those enough for several boring winters worth?
Tim Kirkwood
May-25-2005, 03:44 PM
David and david:D :thumb
Thanks for the links I will have to check a few of those projects out. I plan to try the ring light first.
Tim
Eric&Susan
May-26-2005, 10:59 AM
Here's one more to add to the list:
http://www.digihack.net/2005_02_24_article.php
Eric
NHBubba
May-26-2005, 01:16 PM
Then there's the wacko world of Philo and his LEGO Mindstorm robot photography accessories...
http://www.philohome.comPhilo and his legos so rock! Seriously, geek toys to the max!!!
Tim Kirkwood
May-29-2005, 06:30 AM
Thanks for all the links everyone. There is plenty of stuff to try.:thumb
Tim
Tim Kirkwood
Jun-05-2005, 05:56 PM
Anyone else have anything interesting?
Tim
G'day tim...have a look here (http://wadjelaphotography.smugmug.com/gallery/7096). Lets you work up to f/400
Best part is the camera making. Ive seen a refridgerator used as a camera...a room in an apartment (lets you sit beside the image & watch it burn to neg).. as well as an old VW combi van.
Costs...cake tin
coke can
pin
photographic paper ($10)
developer chemicals ($15)
The are no limits with pinholes. Do a google on the subject...there thousands of pages on the net about it.
Gus
David_S85
Jun-06-2005, 06:14 PM
Ah yes, the Camera Van guy...
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,59929,00.html
There is also a guy in Chicago right now, renting out office space 15-20 floors up for a couple of days across from some interesting Chi city scenes and landmarks. He covers all the windows in black except for a 2" hole exactly in the center of the middle window. The whole room then becomes a pinhole camera.
The unique difference is that he uses a small lens behind the pinhole opening to flip the image back right-side up. And instead of film covering the entire back wall, he then photographs the result conventionally (w/ large format) from the pinhole vantage point. He also arranges the furniture so the image is mixing artfully with the office. It is those images he then sells, displays, and places in his books. There was a Chicago Tribune story about the guy a couple weeks back.
Tim, you game with either of those ideas?
Tim Kirkwood
Jun-07-2005, 01:26 PM
Wow thats sounds neat.
I have seen alot of pinhole cams and such. I might just have to give that I try sometime. It may be a good inside winter project. I have book marked your links and will continue to read up about it.
Thanks Guys!!
Tim
Netgarden
Jun-07-2005, 09:08 PM
Heres my ring flash! :dunno Just cut a rectangle hole in a ping pong ball that allows it to slip over your flash . Works great. Have fun! There is n satisfaction greater than not having to "pay" a price for a good photo.:thumb
http://netgarden.smugmug.com/photos/15078801-M.jpg
Wow thats sounds neat.
I have seen alot of pinhole cams and such. I might just have to give that I try sometime. It may be a good inside winter project. I have book marked your links and will continue to read up about it.
Thanks Guys!!
Tim
Tim Kirkwood
Jun-08-2005, 03:23 PM
Heres my ring flash! :dunno Just cut a rectangle hole in a ping pong ball that allows it to slip over your flash . Works great. Have fun! There is n satisfaction greater than not having to "pay" a price for a good photo.:thumb
Hey thanks Net for addin to my thread. I have seen this project several times. I dont use the onborad flash but maybe I could get a wiffle ball or something larger to fit on a sunpak 383.
Nice to see you posting over here as well!:thumb
Tim
Stan
Jun-20-2005, 03:03 PM
I have been meaning to try this for ages.
A 52mm Cokin "P" ring, ( I am not that good with vacuum moulded plastic)
Drill lots of 6.5mm holes in the ring and glue the caps into the holes
http://stan.smugmug.com/photos/25612916-M.jpg
Insert the LED's
http://stan.smugmug.com/photos/25615426-M.jpg
And give it to a friendly electrician to solder the resistors
http://stan.smugmug.com/photos/25616235-M.jpg
I will post the finished article, if he can wire it up :dunno
patch29
Jun-22-2005, 04:26 PM
This was a DIY project. We had to get the camera out over the edge, further the tripod could reach, to not see the roof above. The roof access was even worse and more dangerous with an eight foot tall wall.
Safety first, it's only $9000+ sitting out there, five stories up. Pretty simple, a board, a 3/8" bolt, tripod head, some clamps and yes two laptop and cases to weigh it down. :huh If the camera goes, the laptops may as well too.
Besides the stuff we had the board was cull lumber, so it was $1.01 and the bolt was $.29 (I think), who needs an expensive carbon fiber tripod. :rofl
http://Patch29.smugmug.com/photos/25843640-M.jpg
Tim Kirkwood
Jun-22-2005, 04:33 PM
This was a DIY project. We had to get the camera out over the edge, further the tripod could reach, to not see the roof above. The roof access was even worse and more dangerous with an eight foot tall wall.
Safety first, it's only $9000+ sitting out there, five stories up. Pretty simple, a board, a 3/8" bolt, tripod head, some clamps and yes two laptop and cases to weigh it down. :huh If the camera goes, the laptops may as well too.
Besides the stuff we had the board was cull lumber, so it was $1.01 and the bolt was $.29 (I think), who needs an expensive carbon fiber tripod. :rofl
I am sure your nieghbors got a laugh outta seeing this rig hanging out the window.:rofl
Did you get your shot? Still have it?
Tim
patch29
Jun-22-2005, 04:54 PM
I am sure your nieghbors got a laugh outta seeing this rig hanging out the window.:rofl
Did you get your shot? Still have it?
It was a hotel walkway. :D We got the shot and the camera stayed put. :clap
Andy
Jun-22-2005, 05:06 PM
http://Patch29.smugmug.com/photos/25843640-S.jpg
mmmmm mr pibb :1drink
wholenewlight
Jun-22-2005, 05:29 PM
It was a hotel walkway. :D We got the shot and the camera stayed put. :clapWait a minute, that's not a hotel walkway! I recognize my house in that view outside your window. And that's my bathroom window your camera is aiming at!
I want royalties on all those pics of me that have been floating around the internet!! :wink
Apologies for hijacking this thread with off-topic thoughts!
Tim Kirkwood
Jun-26-2005, 12:52 PM
Well one of my first DIY's was a flash bracket. It came out pretty well I think. I have used it several times and has worked well. Here are several shots of it.
Tim Kirkwood
Jun-26-2005, 12:53 PM
Here it is with a Sunpak 383 attached.
Tim Kirkwood
Jun-26-2005, 12:56 PM
I then moved on to another project. I was kicking around alot of ideas on how to make a flash diffuser. I wanted just something small and portable. I came up with the following but have not done much testing with it yet. Here are some shots.
Tim Kirkwood
Jun-26-2005, 01:01 PM
The housing is a weather proof cover that you put on an outdoor plug. I removed the back plate that you would bolt to the plug and cut a square hole in the front of the clear housing. I then cut a piece of diffuser from a 2x4 lay in fixture. This is the type of fixture you find in stores and offices. You can find this lens as a replacement at a home center, so you dont have to buy the entire light fixture. I cut the lens to the EXACT size of the opening in the cover and snapped it in. The hole in the front is just the right size for my 383.
Tim Kirkwood
Jun-26-2005, 01:02 PM
Here it is on my 383
Tim Kirkwood
Jun-28-2005, 05:40 PM
I have been meaning to try this for ages.
A 52mm Cokin "P" ring, ( I am not that good with vacuum moulded plastic)
Drill lots of 6.5mm holes in the ring and glue the caps into the holes
Insert the LED's
And give it to a friendly electrician to solder the resistors
I will post the finished article, if he can wire it up :dunno
This is one of my next projects. I like your start. Did you get it finished?
Tim
Stan
Jun-29-2005, 12:40 AM
This is one of my next projects. I like your start. Did you get it finished?
Tim
It is alright, I think I messed up the resistors though, I wanted to end up with a 9v battery, but have only got about 6v, which makes for a more cumbersome battery pack.
It allows shots of 1/6 sec F/8, but until I get the battery pack sorted, I haven't a suitable shot to post
Tim Kirkwood
Jun-29-2005, 04:39 PM
It is alright, I think I messed up the resistors though, I wanted to end up with a 9v battery, but have only got about 6v, which makes for a more cumbersome battery pack.
It allows shots of 1/6 sec F/8, but until I get the battery pack sorted, I haven't a suitable shot to post
Stan,
Did you have a wiring diagram to follow for the resistors? hows come you cant get 9v leds and just wire them straight to the battery? Did you put any sort of dimmer on the lights to adjust your output? Looks like it came out pretty well so far.
Keep me posted.
Tim
Stan
Jun-29-2005, 05:11 PM
Hi Tim,
I took my inspiration from here (http://www.photoprojects.net/index8.html)
And bought my stuff from here (http://shop.dotlight.de/shop/index.php?osCsid=002aa6961a41e59fdb4a26d6dd291252) in Germany, I am sure it can be sourced elsewhere but this was much cheaper than the high street
I think I bought This (http://shop.dotlight.de/shop/product_info.php/cPath/1_23/products_id/35) because of the wider degree of luminosity but I think the brighter one at 22000mcd is brobably better. The description thread (http://www.photoprojects.net/ledhookup.jpg)shows the diagram here using 62ohms 1/8th watt resistors :scratch :scratch :dunno so I did and it turned out to be 6volts total.
Oh and I bought little clip cups to hold the leds I glued them in place.
Good luck
Stan
ziggy53
Jul-01-2005, 11:30 AM
http://www.pinhole.cz/en/pinholecameras/dirkon_01.html
XO-Studios
Jul-01-2005, 01:31 PM
Hi Tim,
I took my inspiration from here (http://www.photoprojects.net/index8.html)
And bought my stuff from here (http://shop.dotlight.de/shop/index.php?osCsid=002aa6961a41e59fdb4a26d6dd291252) in Germany, I am sure it can be sourced elsewhere but this was much cheaper than the high street
I think I bought This (http://shop.dotlight.de/shop/product_info.php/cPath/1_23/products_id/35) because of the wider degree of luminosity but I think the brighter one at 22000mcd is brobably better. The description thread (http://www.photoprojects.net/ledhookup.jpg)shows the diagram here using 62ohms 1/8th watt resistors :scratch :scratch :dunno so I did and it turned out to be 6volts total.
Oh and I bought little clip cups to hold the leds I glued them in place.
Good luck
Stan
Ok here is your challenge.
The LED's you substituted are 3.6 V, 20 mA
That is what they need to ignite.
With a 6V battery that would need (6-3.6= 2.4 V to get a 2.4 volt drop at 20 mA you need a U=IXR 2.4=.020AXR R=120 ohms) or with a 9V battery you would need (9-3.6=5.4V 5.4 drop at 20 mA => 270 Ohm).
The error snuck in your replacement, most LED's are 5 V and 30 mA, in which
6V battery => 33 ohms
9V battery => 133 ohms
or for lower intensity LED's 20 mA
6V battery => 50 ohms
9V battery => 200 ohms
For more information on Ohms law
http://www.google.com/search?q=ohms+law
FWIW, YMMV,
XO
Tim Kirkwood
Jul-01-2005, 06:17 PM
XO,
thanks for the help.
Tim
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