I was challenged to make a lens for a friend without buying any new optical elements. I have a pile of glass that I've salvaged from old camera lenses that I've modified. I wanted to make a cooke triplet but didn't have any negative elements on hand where I precisely knew their characteristics. I then realized that my eye glasses are relatively well characterized negative lenses, so I had an optometrist cut them into a disc shape and I built the lens around that. It performed very well in my simulations, but not so well in real life. But it was a fun project and my friend ended up with a unique lens for her camera.
i remember making my own camera in the mid 1970s. the lens was one of those crappy macro things you could screw onto a proper slr lens, and the film was actually photographic printing paper. the body was cardboard and tape, and the shutter a bit of cloth.<p>after you had taken a pic, you had to rush into the darkroom, develop the paper and then reverse print it (cannot remember how, or even if i did).<p>all a bit weird, but it kept me amused back then. i haven't been involved in photography for nearly 40 years.
If you want to get this effect quickly without spending any money at all, and you have a pro-type camera with a removable lens, you can get it by just holding the lens against the opening, and rocking it side to side a little.<p>It's a pretty common trick photographers and videographers use to get a sort of dream-sequence effect.
What's the name of the song?<p>Edit: CARIBOU - Hello Hammerheads <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2N_VvfPX1Bc" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2N_VvfPX1Bc</a>
From the YouTube video description :-)<p>...<p>With mere hours of experience in the art and science of optical design, the team at SUPERCHROMAT remain novices in the field. As such, this prime lens, with 6 elements over 4 groups, provides inferior optical performance at a price affordable to few.<p>Regardless of whether it’s a matter of selective focus in the close-up range, high-contrast available light applications or landscape shots with immense depth of field, this lens fails to deliver persuasive arguments in nearly all situations unless stopped down to f/22.<p>2X 200mm biconvex lenses
BK7. Uncoated.<p>-700 / 075 X 3 used eyeglass lens
1.67 / Vd 42. Fingerprint coated<p>+30mm aspheric achromatic triplet
LAK14/SF57/Aspheric polymer. VIS 0º coated
I totally love this from a DIY creative perspective. You could probably sell this to Zack Snyder for $5m.<p>Because that's basically what happened in his last 2 abominable movies. He found some really unsuitable thrift lenses and thought it was a master stroke of genius to use them in a professional movie. That's why virtually every single frame is horribly blurred except at the exact center.
"...If you're a fan of vintage photography, with all its charming imperfections, the SUPERCHROMAT lens might be your jam. Embrace the softness, the chromatic aberration, the unpredictable vignetting. This lens isn't about precision; it's about character. And at a price only the absurdly wealthy could afford, it'll definitely make a statement. "<p>The so bad it's actually good :) Lovely song, too