that rope in the foreground boat in the background was magic. If you get the next model ondu consider the rise and fall, I have a 6x6 Ondu with rise and fall pinholes and they are a lot of fun, the vignette you get and the ability to take extreme angles with straight verticals :)
Thank you Matt. I have seen the rise and fall options, it does seem like a handy feature to have. Also like the look of the filter ones, can the rise and fall also hold their magnetic filter attachment?
Hi @@WillGudgeon yep the 6x6 rise and fall also has a magnetic square filter holder which I've used to hold a cokin A infrared filter. It works well, it's a bit fiddly because you can knock the holder off when taking it in and out of your bag. But most importantly you really need to keep the filter super clean. Any little mark in the wrong spot becomes a pretty large blotch on the image. The cokin A square IR filters are super expensive, ideally one of the cheap Chinese companies would make them and you could cycle through them as you scratch them, but as yet I've not found any. Cheap Round IR filters are much easier to find. The other really nice feature on the new Ondu's is the aluminium winders, they are much nicer to use because of the knurling, and they don't run the risk of slipping like the wood ones can (the wood aluminium friction joint can come loose).
Wow thanks for that@@mjones410 Will look into them a bit more, I do have a Hoya IR, not tried it on a pinhole camera yet through. I fitted a filter holder onto my Zero 45 so may have to try it out on that.
I'm too late to the FP4party but I do love that film. The Ondus are so nice and yes pinholes in the rain are perfect, but no, no one likes a leaky camera! Love the last image with the rope in particular.
Hi Will, love your videos & photos. Was wondering if you could tell us where you get the sticks with the short center column that allow you to widen the legs so close to the ground with out any obstruction? Thanks man, look forward to more of your content and photos!
Hi Tom, Manfrotto do sell shorter centre poles, but I just cut mine, I never used it, it always got in the way, so just chopped it off, made life a lot easier.
really enjoyed your video 👌and i am looking for a pinhole camera for a while now, just to add the excitement in film photography. and i must say, the Ondu has the best looking in terms of aesthetics and functional. if you dont mind me asking, which apps you use for metering, i know Ondu has a keychained like exposure table for reference.
Always nice to see you busy Will. I have a small question by the way and perhaps you mentioned it during one of your videos and I forgot but do you compensate for reciprocity failure? Being myself so used shooting on paper negs and not having to compensate I'm a bit puzzled here :) Anyhow, keep it up and grtz from Belgium !
I can see a lot of work goes into these videos. The result is very relaxing!
Thank you very much, Photography for me is very therapeutic, so I like this vides to reflect that a bit.
I love the mk3 135 pano.
that rope in the foreground boat in the background was magic. If you get the next model ondu consider the rise and fall, I have a 6x6 Ondu with rise and fall pinholes and they are a lot of fun, the vignette you get and the ability to take extreme angles with straight verticals :)
Thank you Matt. I have seen the rise and fall options, it does seem like a handy feature to have. Also like the look of the filter ones, can the rise and fall also hold their magnetic filter attachment?
Hi @@WillGudgeon yep the 6x6 rise and fall also has a magnetic square filter holder which I've used to hold a cokin A infrared filter. It works well, it's a bit fiddly because you can knock the holder off when taking it in and out of your bag. But most importantly you really need to keep the filter super clean. Any little mark in the wrong spot becomes a pretty large blotch on the image. The cokin A square IR filters are super expensive, ideally one of the cheap Chinese companies would make them and you could cycle through them as you scratch them, but as yet I've not found any. Cheap Round IR filters are much easier to find. The other really nice feature on the new Ondu's is the aluminium winders, they are much nicer to use because of the knurling, and they don't run the risk of slipping like the wood ones can (the wood aluminium friction joint can come loose).
Wow thanks for that@@mjones410
Will look into them a bit more, I do have a Hoya IR, not tried it on a pinhole camera yet through. I fitted a filter holder onto my Zero 45 so may have to try it out on that.
Thanks! Very cool. I try tomorrow
Thank you 😁
Great video. Great photos 😊
Thank you Miles :)
Nice work.
Thank you :)
Well done. I find the process very relaxing, grab the camera, shoot a roll and develop . Makes for an enjoyable day, every shot an experiment.
I'm too late to the FP4party but I do love that film. The Ondus are so nice and yes pinholes in the rain are perfect, but no, no one likes a leaky camera! Love the last image with the rope in particular.
Thank you Jo 😁
Hi Will, love your videos & photos. Was wondering if you could tell us where you get the sticks with the short center column that allow you to widen the legs so close to the ground with out any obstruction? Thanks man, look forward to more of your content and photos!
Hi Tom, Manfrotto do sell shorter centre poles, but I just cut mine, I never used it, it always got in the way, so just chopped it off, made life a lot easier.
@@WillGudgeon ok, cool man-thanks so much for your response and info!
Seeing the rain made me wonder if you've ever put a drop of water on the pinhole to see what effect it has?
I never have, but have wondered how it would look, may have to give it ago sometime 😊
really enjoyed your video 👌and i am looking for a pinhole camera for a while now, just to add the excitement in film photography. and i must say, the Ondu has the best looking in terms of aesthetics and functional. if you dont mind me asking, which apps you use for metering, i know Ondu has a keychained like exposure table for reference.
Hi thank you.
This video may help with your question 😁
th-cam.com/video/pDtGy6fHQgY/w-d-xo.html
Always nice to see you busy Will. I have a small question by the way and perhaps you mentioned it during one of your videos and I forgot but do you compensate for reciprocity failure? Being myself so used shooting on paper negs and not having to compensate I'm a bit puzzled here :)
Anyhow, keep it up and grtz from Belgium !
Hi Alain, yes I always compensate for reciprocity failure. I use Fomapan a lot and that needs a lot of compensating
Do you crop your photos, or is there really so little vignetting?
very little vignetting on this
A forest