The color box offers a better way to take manual tri-color photos. It does a good job blocking light from entering the lens from the rear. It accepts 100x100x2 mm sized filters.

LS-CF-01-Color-filter-box-x400.jpg

The photo shows it is using these three 100mm filters:

Kodak Dark Red #29 Wratten
Kodak Deep Blue #47 Wratten
Kodak Deep Green #61 Wratten
LS-CF-01-Color-filter-box-both-sides-square-x400.jpg

Experimental Color Wheel

For our monochrome cameras, we're working on a color wheel. This one is a 3D-printed plastic and 320mm in diameter. Using a color wheel should give much better color than a Bayer-type color filter, but it is not suitable for moving objects.

It uses these three 100mm filters:

Kodak Dark Red #29 Wratten
Kodak Deep Blue #47 Wratten
Kodak Deep Green #61 Wratten
No yellow due to lack of software support, but yellow can be added later.

 

e23946d2a376da7264638839af80d8f7_f74.jpg

100+ years old technology

A Russian, Sergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskii, took tri-color photos over 100 years ago using glass plates and a color wheel. It is interesting to go back in time and see his photos. See his photos at the Library of Congress.

21657r.jpg

Status May 2017

For now we're doing 3 colors manually, in the future we may build an auto color wheel, though there are difficulties with that so we're holding off for now.

Still life is straight forward, but it is possible to take images with people also if they can stay still.

Shy Pie in color:

001516-x1024.jpg

Bike in color:

000210-1024.jpg

Tags:
Category: New_Photos

Bill Charbonnet

Founder of LargeSense, the maker of large format digital cameras and backs.

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