inversion - lumin pinhole - experimental pinhole (Updated)
As you may have seen from my last blog on this subject i told you that i was in the process of doing an experimental pinhole camera, which was where i had to capture the sun rising over the space of three months, as well as me explaining how i made the camera also.
Well, as you can see by the image above, this is my result of my experimental lumin pinhole camera, over the course of 3 months from January to March 23rd. This is also the result of an inversion of the photo using photoshop.
To get this image however, i first had to extract my photographic paper from the can in which i used to hold the paper, as well as dry it off as it was wet from the weather over the past couple of months.
I then placed it underneath a fixed lens camera, which was suspended above my photographic paper as well as being set on a two second timer on its self timer setting.
Once i obtained the image on the camera, i then uploaded it onto photoshop, then applied an inversion of the photo by going onto edit and clicking on invert, where i got the result being the photo above.
I think that the experiment went quite well for the time frame in which i had to do it in; i had some problems though as it kept falling down from where i had to it hanging up so thats probably why on my photographic paper it just came out as a white piece of paper with a brown streak across it, but i think by looking at result of the inversion, it came out quite well regardless of the problems i had of it keep falling down, as i feel that the inversion has given it a nice night time starry night feel to it.
I also know from my experience of now completing the experimental task, is that there is ways i can improve on it, such as make sure it is more secure so it does not keep falling down, all be it most of the time it was the weather that was responsible for it falling down. I think the best way for me to know if i have improved with it is to do it again, and then compare both how the photographic looks and by the final inversion on photoshop to then see which looks better than the other.

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