View allAll Photos Tagged SlitScan
Part of a (developing) series of iPhone ScanCamera slit-scans of the carnival amusement thrill ride called the Zipper. Here the slit was moving Top to Bottom. Cinco de Mayo, Portland, OR i6s+5215
Slitscan photo taken of Albany Thunder pitcher Joe Slater during Albany Twilight League baseball game on June 12, 2013. Shot with modified Nikon EM camera, Nikkor 50-300mm telephoto lens, Rite Aid 400 film. Photo taken by Chuck Miller.
Taken with an Ilford Envoy box camera modified, using black paper, to take narrow slit images. One afternoon in August I took the Number 1 Vaporetto (water bus) in Venice from the Bacino San Marco, along the length of the Grand Canal to the Piazzale Roma. The journey of 3.5km takes about an hour. Every few moments I took a photo and advanced the film by 1/8th of a turn, moving to 1/10th of a turn towards the end as the take up spool grew in diameter as the film built up. There were 133 exposures in total, this is a small portion.
The full width can be seen here:
On the way home from Vianen, sleepbootdagen 25 - 27 mei 2017
Picture made with slitscan technique: MatchTemplate
08:35 28-05-2017
Slitscan photo taken of Albany Thunder pitcher Joe Slater during Albany Twilight League baseball game on June 12, 2013. Shot with modified Nikon EM camera, Nikkor 50-300mm telephoto lens, Rite Aid 400 film. Photo taken by Chuck Miller.
Suddenly the world began to spin forming this vortex from which three locomotives and a train emerged. Fortunately the exposure ended before the train could crash into itself. i4s5202 - Happy Sliders Sunday!
Band Width: 1 pixel
Frame Rate: 120 fps
Lamp Mode: Static, horizontal
Image Size: 3x
Recording Resolution: 1080p
For this shot the ScanCamera slit was orientated vertically across a section of curved track causing each locomotive and railroad car to get this warped appearance as they passed in front of the slit. In Photoshop I reversed the image right left so the train and the lettering on the cars would face the right direction and read correctly. i4s5202e2
low tech DYI experiment- a long exposure; taken through a slit in one end of a box which moves slowly across the frame
This is a slit photography (from digital video), the same column of photosites was sampled every 1/30 s over several seconds. See some more explanations and tips here : www.flickr.com/photos/24151359@N04/sets/72157622751601733/
Made with ScanCamera App for iPhone.
Look at full size image (using full HD option):
www.flickr.com/photos/da_gagnon/8658651365/sizes/o/in/pho...
or a scene from the soon to be autonomous vehicle future? I like the time-lapse like effect/feeling that ScanCamera slitscan gave this. i4s11326,27
Learn more about the Broadway Bridge and its Centennial via the links on the Broadway Bridge • Portland Oregon flickr group page. Please view full-size in the BridgeBox. i4s3681 - Happy Birthday Broadway Bridge!
Made with ScanCamera App for iPhone.
Look at full size image (using full HD option):
www.flickr.com/photos/da_gagnon/8658652745/sizes/o/in/pho...
Taken with a slit-cam adapted from a simple point and shoot camera. The shutter was wedged open using a piece of plastic tube and some blu-tac, and a 1mm slit, made from black card, was mounted at the film plane. The cog-wheel which normally engages with the 35mm sprockets was taped over, thus fooling the automated wind on into keeping running for about 4 seconds each time the shutter release is pressed. The camera, an Olympus Trip 300 (£1.25 from a charity shop), has a slide across lens cover which is ideal to keep light out of the lens between exposures. I calculated that with the film moving at 60mm per second (measured by videoing the film winding then counting the perforations) the 1mm slit gives an exposure equivalent to 1/60th of a second. The 34mm lens has a fixed aperture of f5.6, so with ISO 200 film, the exposure was just right for an overcast late autumn afternoon. The first film was really just to see if the concept worked, next I plan to select places and subjects that should give interesting results from this technique.
Nantes 9 Oct
Race 3: Prix du bois Joli
1e Tour
My Blog:
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For this image the ScanCamera LampOrientation=ShortEdge/Vertical, see tags for more ScanCamera and processing details, and first comment below for original SOC and alternate LampOrientation versions. i4s4241 - Happy Sliders Sunday!
For this image the ScanCamera LampOrientation=LongEdge/Horizontal, see first comment below for original SOC and alternate LampOrientation versions. i4s4242
沼津駅(だったと思う)構内で徐々に加速中の貨物列車を撮影。
Digital slitscan image composed from a movie by HD camcorder. 2700 frames are stitched. Original full-resolution image can be seen at Gigapan www.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=30611 .
Stereographic spiral projection would be a good way to show a train with minimal distortions.
Stereoscopic time displacement of modular origami. A 'Five Intersecting Tetrahedra' model, placed on a display turntable and shot using the 'ScanCamera' app on my ipod. For the left and right views, rather than shift the camera, i tried starting the exposures at slightly different times. It worked fairly well, but i'd like to try and get a bit more depth next time.
With a slit-scan app the sliding begins in camera as the slit slides across the frame collecting the image. Above the slit moves from left to right while the camera for the first two thirds of the image is also moving left to right, then for the last third of the image the camera direction was reversed yielding this in camera reversed image diptych, which was then processed with some NikColorEfexPro filters(see tags) and Photoshop. ScanBox. i4s3691 - Happy Sliders Sunday!
Following the The Last Regiment Syncopated Drummers down the raceway was this wonderful parade Adult Soapbox Derby of attendees.
The stationary vertical slit (a few pixel wide image area) was positioned across a partially shaded section of the raceway adding to the sense of depth and variety of light in the final image. A gentle breeze moved the branches that were making the shade adding some undulation to the top and bottom of what otherwise would have been a completely static background. The image was doubled in width in post to make the horizontal dimension of the people more natural; the variations in width of the people is caused primarily by how quickly or slowly they were walking past the slit, as well as how close they were to the camera, the direction there body was turned, etc. i4s6504
Brew time of a little more than 3 minutes. You can see me pour the leaves (and rice) in at the left. The white line through the middle of the tea is a sun-glint. The slight motion above the tea is mostly droplets of condensation joining and flowing.
A series of overlapping exposures taken one afternoon in September, when I took the Number 1 Vaporetto (water bus) in Venice from the Bacino San Marco, along the length of the Grand Canal to the Piazzale Roma. The journey of 3.5km takes about an hour.
The camera was a modified Bencini Koroll 24 camera. As the name suggests, this model manages to squeeze 24 exposures out of a roll of 120 film, by using a mask to make the image size 3cm x 4cm. The edges of the film are wasted, but by using the "12 frame" backing paper markings twice, 24 exposures are made.
I removed the mask, so the full width of the film is exposed, and the frames overlap. The 24 exposures take up the full length of the film, this scan is one quarter.
The film is Lomography branded colour negative, developed in the Tetenal C41 kit.
Photo taken of fifth race at Saratoga Race Course, August 31, 2013. Shot with Nikon EM camera, Fuji Superia 800 film, camera modified for slitscan photography. Photo by Chuck Miller.
I saw this newly published book "Experimental Photography - A Handbook of Techniques" in a bookshop, and after a quick flick through, decided it was right up my street. It wasn't until I got it home and started reading, that I realised I'd written three of the pages! It was a couple of years ago, and I'd completely forgotten about it...
Atmospheric conditions on the first day of Summer at the Tigard Balloon Festival were ideal for balloon launching; the air was so still that it easily became temporately stratified - by the repeated blasts of hot air from the balloon engines - creating these wonderful ever changing Fata Morgana like mirages, including a very rare stack of rainbow flashes (middle photo) which are related to the rare but still more common green flash. See and learn more about all these atmospheric phenomena here. i4s5101,5103,5107
The engine looks very alike with the German one.
This picture is made from a movie taken with an iPhone SE.
Thursday June 6th join the PDX Nightowls at the Rose Festival City Fair for a fun evening of carnival/ride photography. i4s4210