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roaringtree
I am a photographer who loves the unique aesthetic underdog cameras can provide, pinhole cameras and alternative processes. My favourite underdog camera is my all plastic Recesky TLR which I have used extensively and learned to embrace its limitations and unique character.
I especially love to convert broken medium format cameras to pinhole taking off the glass lens and defective shutter, giving them a second life. It is not hugely difficult to do, but measurements from pinhole plate to film must be very accurate!
Self-made cameras are great and I make them quirky with whatever I have to hand so they cost next to nothing. There is something really special about photography using a camera you modify or build from scratch.
I also love to use 35mm film in lo-fi 126 and medium format cameras to bring them back to life, plus you get sprockets too!
At the end of 2022, I discovered a love of creating cyanotypes and printing photos using acetate negatives.. quite a journey to understand the creative possibilities. This even includes creating 'in camera' cyanotypes, a whole new journey fraught with difficulty and needing a lot of time and light. Up until Spring 2024 I had only managed to share 2 successful in-camera cyanotypes with far more failure than success but still learning.
As of May 2024 I am making good progress with in camera cyanotypes now so will keep sharing results with this difficult but not impossible aspect of the cyanotype process!
In early summer 2023 I discovered the creative possibilities of 'in camera' lumen photography mainly using expired B&W photo paper and self-made cameras from scrap wood. This is probably the steepest learning curve I have ever been on, it is also quite addictive and obsessive! (A bonus with self made lumen cameras is that I sometimes get to use the lenses from the broken cameras I convert to pinhole)
In camera lumens are wildly unpredictable! I don't think I have ever been able to reliably replicate results and may never truly understand the process.
After being on this wonderfully creative site for more than two years, I still find the photos uploaded by my friends on the Lomography site really inspiring. I learn a lot about seeing and composition because they are often so different to what I do myself. The vision of my fellow Lomographers really helps me out of the occasional creative rut. Seeing through the creative eyes of other photographers is really special... so thank you all for what you share!