Pinhole Photography in the Digital Age
This workshop will begin by introducing participants to making a pinhole camera out of a 35mm film camera. Students will learn how to make their own pinhole cameras out of selected objects and get accurate exposures. We will use both film and darkroom processes to develop results, and digital scanning and printing. This workshop assumes a basic understanding of camera controls, darkroom processes (film developing and printing). Scanning and printing digitally will be introduced.
Dennie Eagleson is a fine art/documentary photographer who taught photography at Antioch College for sixteen years and is currently teaching at the Nonstop Institute for Liberal Arts. She often uses plastic lens and pinhole cameras in her fine-art work, appreciating the way that they transform the world and create images that evoke memory and sense of place. Dennie prints her color work digitally, appreciating the intersections of old and new technologies, and the possibilities available in both. Archeology of a Life, a project of color pinhole images made in an abandoned house, was recently published in The Elements of Photography.
Beginner , Limit 15
Workshop Status: CANCELLED



