Pinhole Lens Test

2009 January 8, Thursday · Hallings gate, Oslo, Norway

MORE +

I got a new pinhole lens (smaller hole than the tiniest pinprick I could make, and perfectly round), and wanted to test it against my old DIY pinhole.

⁓ Chris · 2009 Jan 10 · 1:17AM
‹ leave a comment ›

50mm lens

2009 January 8 · 7:18PM · Thursday

First I used my 50mm to establish a baseline. (The pinhole is something like 47mm away from the sensor, so you’ll see that they are just a bit wider.)

⁓ Chris · 2009 Jan 10 · 1:25AM
‹ leave a comment ›

DIY pinhole

2009 January 8 · 7:23PM · Thursday

I put a piece of aluminum foil on a piece of paper and made the tiniest pinprick I could. I then drilled a hole through a lens cap and taped the foil over the hole.

Lots of weird starry shapes around the candles, and some nasty flare underneath the clock and over the speaker. (But this is an extremely contrasty, difficult shot; I’ve been quite happy with this lens.)

⁓ Chris · 2009 Jan 10 · 1:28AM
‹ leave a comment ›

laser-cut pinhole

2009 January 8 · 7:25PM · Thursday

Wow. First off, this shot is ISO 1600 while the last one was ISO 800 (both 30 sec. exposures), because this hole was so much smaller.

None of the odd flaring, and how do you like those halos? I guess diffraction is real, after all. :)

⁓ Chris · 2009 Jan 10 · 1:31AM

Neat! Especially the diffraction.

On the down side, all evidence I’ve seen so far for the claim “everything is in focus on a pinhole” seemes to be better explained as “everything is the same kind of blurry on a pinhole”.

⁓ Johannes · 2009 Jan 12 · 9:05AM

“everything is the same kind of blurry on a pinhole”

Well, yeah, “in focus” is relative. You would not call a pinhole lens “sharp”. Depending on the scene, though, this could be fine.

⁓ Chris · 2009 Jan 13 · 11:45AM
‹ leave a comment ›