Tag Archive for 'pinhole cameras'

Tarja Trygg and the Epic Solargraphy Project!

Dear SuperForest,

It’s been months since Jackson’s legendary Michel Bayard pinhole camera post and being that SuperForest is such a fan of pinhole photographs, I thought it was only appropriate to share this stunning project with you all.

Ladies and gents, I present to you, solargraphy!!!

Siuntio, Finland

Solargraphs are long exposure photographs taken with a lensless pinhole camera used to record the invisible movements of the sun in landscapes. What’s even more breathtaking than the resulting image is the process by which it is created. Nowadays, most of us are used to having a photograph capture a single moment, but with solargraphy, due to the extremely long exposure time (usually anywhere ranging from a day to months) these images can show us the things that are impossible to see with the naked eye.

Solargraphy

For example, the image above is a six month exposure of Helsinki taken with a homemade pinhole camera positioned from a balcony. Each day, the sun left a new track in the sky and the peak was reached at around midsummer in the northern hemisphere. Awesome!

Here comes the fun part. The photographer that captured that image, Tarja Trygg, has started this epic project that attempts to create a world map by using solargraphs! Assistants around the world have placed pinhole cameras at different latitudes and the gallery can be seen here!

Johannesburg, South Africa

Wisconsin, USA

And so, the humble pinhole camera continues to amaze and mystify!

Love always,
Carla

P.S. To learn how to make your own pinhole camera, click here! I made one a while ago…and I’m just realizing I have yet to take a picture with it.

(via the always nice, It’s Nice That)

SuperForest Gets Stumbleupon’ed!

Good Morning SuperForest!

Something wonderful has happened!

I needed a bit of time to fully process it, so my apologies for not writing about it sooner.

Last month an article on SuperForest about Michel Bayard, NYC’s pinhole camera master, got picked up by makezine, which then got picked up by stumbleupon.

As a result, this article has now been viewed more than 130,000 times!

Zaaaaackaawaaaahhhhhh!

For this little blog to get a hundred thousand of anything is pretty darn good-feeling-making, but to have folks really express an interest in a great man and his incredible talents is just icing city. (As in an entire city made of icing.)

I hope this leads to further recognition of Michel Bayard and his prodigious gifts, and an increased appreciation for street art and street artists. Remember, there is treasure everywhere!

A massive “Thank you” to whomever the kind souls were who suggested us to makezine and to stumbleupon. Thank you very much. You’ve thrilled this humble blog!

DIY World Pinhole Camera Day Camera!

Corbis.com has teamed up with Brooklyn design firm Fwis to create an amazing collection of downloadable DIY pinhole cameras.

They are incredible! All made of paper.

It’s all a part of a yearly event called World Pinhole Camera Day, which will next happen on April 26th, 2009.

On World Pinhole Camera Day, (or preferably the day before,) download the instructions for one of these sweet cameras, fold it together, chuck some of that old film that’s been in your refrigerator in it, and head outside into the ol’ sunny sun sun to celebrate your freedom by making pinhole photographs.

Get your filmed developed and scanned, and upload your pinhole pickies to the official World Pinhole Camera Day gallery.

Fun!

If you like this post, you’ll probably like this one too.

Michel Bayard – NYC’s DIY Pinhole Camera Master Rediscovered!

With the above camera, Michel Bayard made these:

Good Morning SuperForest.

Jackson here.
A few years back I was walking through the city and I passed a man selling photos. What instantly caught my eye was that each photo was exactly the size of one frame of film, no enlargements, a one to one transfer.

I stopped and had a gander at the works, speaking in vague pleasantries with the vendor. The work was really good! I asked the guy: “What did you use to shoot these?”

And he replied: “This” taking a small plastic film container out of his pocket.

He had cut a chunk out of the side of the film canister, taped a small sliver of soda can over the hole, and pushed a teeny tiny pinhole through the sliver. He had made a pinhole camera.

I asked him how much he wanted for a piece, and he replied “Twenty dollars.”

I cannot remember what happened next. I had no money, I chickened out, I was hit by a moving van. For some reason I walked away without a piece of this man’s work.

I have spent every moment since looking for him.

Many were the nights I spent searching, kicking myself for not jumping at the chance to possess something that moved and interested me.

Yesterday, I found him!

Michel Bayard is an extraordinary New York photographer. His pinhole pieces are treasures. And when I saw him in Union Square this Saturday, I flipped out.
I got all fan boy. Trying to tell him how happy I was to find him while he was on the phone with someone…

He hung up the phone, gave me a smile and a handshake, and told me magical things…

He told me about using Altoids boxes to make cameras. He showed me how to position a pinhole camera to produce a variety of visual effects, bridges that twist and wobble, buildings that stretch skyward… He told me of his secret techniques for getting those that have not asked to cease photographing his works.

I did not get any of his back story, but I have his email, and I will approach him about doing an interview. His document of this modern city using an ancient method is utterly charming.

Michel has no official site, but many admirers:

apartmenttherapy.com – Michel Bayard: Pinhole Photographer
usefilm.com – Michel Bayard
fotolog.com – mbayard

Here’s Michel’s flickr set.
And here is Michel on an episode of BikeTV.

Most amazing is that Michel is clever and crafty enough to pack his entire display…

Onto this bicycle…

Amazing!

Michel, you are a SuperForest Hero. For your contribution to the cultural growth of the citizens of New York, E Pluribus Unum, your steadfast dedication to documenting this astouding urban environment, and for your awesome self-reliant, carbon-negative, bicycling ways, SuperForest is proud to award you… the Good Person Award!

After we had our lovely chat, Michel was kind enough to sell me this:

It cost $20.00, and I will treasure it for the remainder of my life.

Keep an eye out for Michel. The man is a living treasure.
He’s sometimes in Union Square on weekends.

Love to All,

Jackson