Stand inside the camera…

Posted by Haje Jan Kamps

cameratruck2.jpgSo, you’ve gone tired of making pinhole cameras out of milk cartons, tins, and boxes? You are thinking bigger? These guys built a pinhole lorry, using the entire loading bed as a pinhole camera!

American photographer Shaun Irving and English Art Director Richard Browse have created what they believe to be the world’s largest mobile camera. Designed in America and constructed in Spain, the cameratruck is a simple box camera built right inside a standard delivery truck. Measuring 5 metres long, 2 metres wide and 2 metres high, the gigantic camera is capable of taking pictures almost 3 metres across.

$ earned from this advert will be invested in beer

cameratruck.jpgThe cameratruck serves as transportation, shelter, darkroom and of course giant camera. And though it sounds like a hi-tech marvel, the camera itself is as simple as can be: just a light-tight box with a hole in it. It’s like the very first pinhole cameras ever used, but with two important differences: the cameratruck uses a lens to focus the giant image inside the box, and unlike any other camera in the world, the photographer stands inside the camera to take the picture. This makes the cameratruck a fantastic educational tool, especially in this digital age when the magic of photography is rapidly disappearing. As Shaun himself says, “Photography is so much easier to understand when you stand inside a camera and see it happening all around you.”

Taking a huge photo with a 5 metre camera is where the magic of the cameratruck starts. But developing the negative and resulting positive prints is what moves the work of Shaun Irving from photography into art. The size of the negatives, about 2.5 metres wide by 1 metre high, make them impossible to develop in a standard developing bath, so Shaun has to work in the dark, sponging on the chemicals by hand from a bucket. The smell is nauseating, but slowly the image begins to appear on the huge sheets of photographic paper. And not just the image: there are streaks where the developer missed, swirls and bubbles where the sponge paints its way across the surface of the paper. You might even see Shaun’s handprints in there somewhere. Every negative is developed by hand and every print made from it is unique.

A truly inspired project, well worthy of a link, I thought… Check them out on Cameratruck.net!

Did you like this post? Stay in touch!

If you liked this post, why not stay in touch with Photocritic going forward?

I'm on Flickr and Twitter, or you could add my RSS feed to your favourite feed reader. Or, if you don't fancy doing any of that, drop us a comment below; you can be anonymous if you want to, but if you add a link to your blog or similar, I'll promise I'll come have a look!

Money made from this advert will be invested in beer.
Posted in: All articles • 17 May '06

Insights, suggestions and comments

By pinhole junkie on May 17th, 2006 (permalink)

Hate to burst your bubble but it isn’t a pinhole camera since it uses a lens;

“The cameratruck uses this same principle only amplified thousands of times and with a lens added for sharper detail in the final shots.”

By JUNEBUG on February 22nd, 2007 (permalink)

On a pinhole camera the thing that lets you expose the film is like a lens.
Umm IO am not very good at describing things because I am only 13 6 days ago.
I am doing pinhole camera as a science fair project! If you have any helpful information you can reply to this thingy.

By sandra on March 7th, 2007 (permalink)

Go to Henry’s camera store…they have ready made pinhole camera’s for you to put together that work very well. My 12 year old son is doing pinhole photography for his science fair project also. Use light sensitive paper and have mom or dad help with developing it (you’ll need a very dark room for this). check out http://www.wandascott.com - It’s a great website explaining how to make pinhole cameras and how to develop your paper if you’re parents don’t know this already.

By Disposable Wedding Cameras on August 14th, 2007 (permalink)

Great info! I have created a few pinhole cameras for projects as well.

By WEDDING CAMERAS on September 24th, 2007 (permalink)

what is the price for the pinhole cameras ?

please advise

thanks

 

Share your wisdom



Current Poll

By the end of the month, will you own an iPhone?
View Results

My recent Flickr favourites

Sweet as sin and black as hell©ashley suzanne taylorWalt Disney Concert Hall 2Caressed by the Sun IIIPale LifeBorage flower"Between the lights and the shadows, a woman sits"End of Day (II)Midsummer!Hair Trim (87/365)Rocas ValleThe Netherlands, insidePaint the town Pink.Have a good day!DSC_4102Bending The Laws of Gravity
See all my Flickr favourites here

My recent Flickr uploads

near Swingate, ENG, United KingdomWarmenhuizen, North Holland, NetherlandsKorrewegwijk, Groningen, Netherlandsnear Ladegårdshuse, Roskilde, Denmarknear Hornstrup, Vejle, DenmarkVejleHolmenkollen, Oslo, NorwayRogaland reflected in an Arai
See my Flickr galleries here

Photocritic on Twitter...

  • Jul 5 tweet: 58 crazy-good photography tutorials has lots of good tips (and features one of mine at #40 :) http://is.gd/1nPHc (link)
  • Jul 5 tweet: Awesome photograph by the lovley @phototropy; Sweet as sin and black as hell http://is.gd/1nyDp (link)
  • Jul 3 tweet: http://bit.ly/v7PfR was nominated to become a Twitter tee - feel free to vote it down if you think it's lame! :) (link)
  • Jul 2 tweet: "We shot 50,000 pix, printed 8,000 of them and shot another 1,800 pictures" - http://is.gd/1lTrX (YouTube video / stop motion animation) (link)
  • Jul 2 tweet: I failed to notice that I now have over 3,000 followers! I'll do my best not to disappoint, stay tuned for Photocritic updates soon. (link)
  • Jul 2 tweet: The Human Printer 'prints' photographs in CMYK using felt-tip markers. Bonkers, but very cool: http://is.gd/1li3D (link)
  • follow @photocritic on Twitter!

My book

macrocover.jpg
... is now available from »Amazon.com and »Amazon.co.uk, too!

About

This site is all about learning more about photography, from the incredibly insightful (rarely) to the dreadfully mundane (also, hopefully rarely) via just about everything in between.

If this website seems a little whimsical and random, then that's because the author of this blog, who for the occasion is confusing himself by writing about himself in the third person, is slightly whimsical and random himself.

Enjoy!

- Haje