Hola por aqui dejo unos planos que hice en su dia para ayuda de la construcion. Recomiendo primero hacerse con una optica y luego realizar ...
Entrevue avec Sébastien Bergeron, créateur des fameuses Street Box Camera
Brooklyn-based photographer David Lang stumbled upon street photographers working with incredibly unique, hand-made cameras, similar in look to a large-format camera. The wooden box camera, called “Kamra-e-faoree", translating to “Instant Camera,” is both a camera and darkroom in one.
Connaissez-vous les afghan box, kamra-e-faoree, minuteros, lambé lambé, chambre gabonaise, cuban polaroïd, street box ? A chaque pays, son nom pour désigner ces appareils ! Boîte en bois de la tai…
Box camera photographers have run a roaring trade for decades on the streets of Afghanistan – but now digital cameras and law changes threaten to consign them to history, writes Sean O'Hagan
My name is Antoine Loncle, and I'm an independent photographer. I shared my homemade 8x10 box camera on several photography groups and it received a lot
Response to my showing images of the Kabul street photographers and the work of the Afghan Box Camera Project (see the post on 03/02/2017)...
It was a wooden box with the bellows and lens from a folding camera mounted at one end with a complete darkroom inside. Using photographic printing paper the photographer would expose a sheet of paper for the negative, develop, stop, and fix it inside the camera, then put a copy stand on the camera and photograph the negative (to obtain a positive), develop, stop, and fix, then wash the final print in a coffee can of water attached to his homemade tripod.
My old pal, Bay Area shutterbug Billy Baque, has a passion for the handmade, low-tech, all-in-one cameras-plus-darkrooms used by street photographers
I recently came across this website about Afghan box cameras and I cannot get it out of my mind. These things are AMAZING, so I wanted to share this with you! “As of June 2011 Afghanistan is …
Luis Maldonado is the last remaining photographer in the main square of the Chilean capital still using a wooden box camera. The box camera's mechanism is simple: light enters through a lens and the photographic paper inside it captures a negative image of the subject. I know that you have to eat and live. But if it were up to me, I'd only be doing box photos. It's what fills me up,
I know, I know. It’s been done before, but not by me, so I gave ‘er a go. It started when I discovered a blog post online: DIY Foam core 8×10 camera by
We're sharing some camera settings for street photography, which you can dial in when you’re ready to hit the street and snap some photos.
My name is Antoine Loncle, and I'm an independent photographer. I shared my homemade 8x10 box camera on several photography groups and it received a lot
M-20 Macy’s Box Camera By Ansco
Photographer Samuel Ryde’s latest project, ‘Telephone Booths’, invites us to reconsider this vanishing feature of the modern landscape
The Afghan box camera—a homemade wooden device known as the kamra-e-faoree, meaning “instant camera”—has been used to preserve memories in Afghanistan for generations. But it is in danger of being forgotten.
The box camera is really a camera and a darkroom in one (somewhat) portable package — and in Afghanistan, it's a dying medium.
For decades, street photographers in Afghanistan and Pakistan have used handmade wooden box cameras to take portraits of locals. A new book, Afghan Box Camera, charts the history of this lo-fi trade – and its beautiful results