Today is Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day

Make some pinhole photos, pick your best one, and upload it to the WPPD gallery (free)!

Don’t have a pinhole camera? No problem! There are workshops and exhibits of pinhole photography all over the world today where you can build or use one, check the events listings for your area.

If there’s nothing near you, grab the free plans for one of these paper cut-out do-it-yourself 35mm pinhole cameras:

The Dirkon

Nick Dvoracek‘s Populist (PDF link).

You can also make your own pinhole and mount it into a drilled-out body cap and use it on your film or digital SLR or rangefinder.

Happy shooting!

Today is Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day!

Make some pinhole photos, pick your best one, and upload it to the WPPD gallery (free)!

Don’t have a pinhole camera? No problem! There are workshops and exhibits of pinhole photography all over the world today where you can build or use one, check the events listings for your area.

If there’s nothing near you, grab the free plans for one of these paper cut-out do-it-yourself 35mm pinhole cameras:

The Dirkon

Nick Dvoracek‘s Populist (PDF link).

I’m going to shoot and check out the show [see previous post] at RayKo Photo Center in San Francisco, CA, US.

Happy shooting!

PS Please note that despite what they tell you, WPPD is not presented by the Lomographic Society International!

Lomographic Society continues to suck, co-opts Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day

The goons at the Lomographic Society International—the people who brought the world the $20 Holga for $70 and monopolistic control over the distribution of the Lomo LC-A camera—have now added Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day to the list of products and events they had nothing to do with creating that they’ve claimed as their own. The headline of their latest newsletter proclaims, “THE LOMOGRAPHIC SOCIETY INTERNATIONAL PROUDLY PRESENTS THE WORLD PINHOLE DAY”.

Um, no.

WPPD was started in 2001. As far as I know—and please correct me if I’m wrong—none of the members of that year’s coordinating team were affiliated with LSI. Same with this year’s roster. Or any year in between. So to the best of my knowledge, LSI doesn’t present WPPD, proudly or otherwise, at all.

Granted, they don’t use the exact same name, they call it “World Pinhole Day”, and the actual pinhole day event is called “Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day”, but they look same, and they just happen to fall on the same date.

Why would they do such a thing? Probably because it’s a good way to sell more pinhole cameras. They have a decent selection of horribly overpriced pinholes to choose from. And that’s fine. But is it necessary to claim WPPD as their event, which is clearly a crock of shit, to do so? No. They could have gotten behind the real Pinhole Day and promoted it to their mutual advantage instead of choosing this classically-LSI approach. I urge you to think about the kind of company you’re supporting when you buy from them (to say nothing of the fact that you’re almost certainly over-paying).

Here’s where to get the pinhole cameras LSI sells, or equivalents, for less. Prices are in US dollars.

PinHolga: $60 from LSI, $21.95 from holgamods

35mm PinHolga: I don’t know, but you can convert most $1 plastic 35mm cameras yourself, or you can make or buy a pinhole cap for your 35mm, medium format, or digital SLR.

Bulldog Large Format Camera: $325 from LSI, $302.43 from camerabellows.com (as of today’s exchange rate, and that includes VAT, which shouldn’t apply to US orders). And, you can find used, no-assembly-required 4×5 cameras for less. You can try the Buy/Sell board on the Large Format Photography Forum, the Cameras & Lenses classifieds on APUG, or the auction sites.

Zero Image Zero 2000 (“Zero Pinhole 120”): $165 from LSI, $93 from the manufacturer

Zero Image Zero 135 (“Zero Pinhole 35”): $140 from LSI, $93 from the manufacturer

Zero Image Zero 69 Deluxe w/ spirit level & cable release (“Zero Image Deluxe”): $320 from LSI, $222 from the manufacturer

Noon Large Format Pinhole: $225 from LSI, grab the similar-looking and almost certainly identically-functioning (LSI doesn’t list the focal length of the one they sell) Santa Barbara 4×5 75mm pinhole camera for $63.95 from B&H

Sharan DIY Pinhole: $40 from LSI, free if you download and print the plans for the original Dirkon paper pinhole camera, or you can grab the plans for Nick Dvoracek‘s Populist cut-out pinhole camera (PDF link). They’re all paper cameras that you have to put together yourself.

SmileyCam: $25 from LSI, $23 from Justin Quinnell, who makes them. Or just make one yourself, which should be very easy.

And it’s not a pinhole, but you can get a SplitCam $11.95 from the awesome American Science & Surplus instead of paying LSI $25.

 

Why else don’t I like the Lomographic Society?

Shitty products at high prices: their flagship, the LC-A, is a piece of junk. The lens is unique and awesome, but the camera that surrounds it sucks. They didn’t build them, but they locked down the supply and charge a premium. The first LC-A I ordered from them operated in bulb mode no matter what. The shutter button on the replacement fell off after running less than five rolls through it. I haven’t used an LC-A+ and therefore can’t comment on it.

Their Colorsplash and Fisheye cameras have some of the worst build quality I’ve ever seen. Yes, they work. But for how long? I think my $1.50 Lex 35 crapcams are actually built slightly better.

Their Hipshot was my first camera bag. The seams are unraveling and the Velcro on the camera compartments doesn’t stick—even when I press them together carefully—which leaves anything you put in them likely to fly out and break as you move.

Terrible customer support: When I received the broken LC-A, I sent them several emails over the course of I think three weeks and never got a single response. Finally I called them, sent back the whole package, and got only a replacement camera back. I guess they kept the rest of the kit.

Monopolistic and bullying business practices: they secured world-wide exclusive distribution rights to the LC-A from the factory (can’t charge $200-250 for a $50 camera if there’s any competition!) and then went after anyone else who sold them, regardless of origin.

For example, Lomo Joe is a guy who lived in St. Petersburg, Russia. If you didn’t want to pay the extortionate Lomo Society price for an LC-A, he’d go buy one in a local store and send it to you. Check out the threatening letter LSI president Wolfgang Stranzinger sent him.

Getting people to love getting ripped off: this one’s almost difficult not to find evidence of. People drool all over themselves for anything “Lomo” (including things whose only connection to Lomo is that they’re sold by LSI, like Holgas and Horizons) and just can’t wait to be taken advantage of by paying hugely inflated prices and having their work published in books that LSI profits from without offering the photographers any compensation. I guess getting screwed by a marketing company is its own reward.

Pinhole Day show and workshops at RayKo Photo Center, CA, US

All kinds of good things are happening for Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day at RayKo Photo Center in San Francisco, CA, US:

Work by Katharine Kreisher and Rebecca Rome in the main gallery; meet the artists from 3–5pm.

A group show of pinhole photography (including work by Katie Cooke and myself).

Free rides around San Francisco in Simon Lee‘s “bus obscura”, a van that’s been converted into a pinhole camera!

Sweet!

Serious concerns about Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day terms

NOTE: We have sent a copy of this to the WPPD team, and will be happy to include their response. Were it not for the time-sensitive nature of the material, we would have done so prior to publication.

I was psyched for Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day this year. I packed up a bunch of film and headed to a friend’s birthday BBQ and brought an extra camera along in case anybody else wanted to try. They were good sports and let me make blurry pictures of them, and we all had fun. I picked up the 7 rolls of 120 I shot yesterday, got home, and got down to editing. I picked an image to upload to this year’s WPPD gallery, loaded up the submission form, read the rules governing submissions, and was extremely disturbed. I sat down and went through them, line by line, with Katie Cooke, who was also ready to upload an image. This is what we found:

 

(1) WPPD is a non-commercial event, open to everybody, everywhere in the world. Participation in WPPD is completely free; there are no submission fees, and no charges for exhibiting on the WPPD web site.

Great idea! Pinhole photography, fun, not making the artists pay, sounds good! But as always, you have to read the fine print:

 

(5) [the photograph] can be of any subject.

Well, not really. See rules 7 and 10.

 

(7) [the photograph] must respect common decency and human rights (no pornography).

Common decency where? Sweden or Saudi Arabia? If you aggregated everyone’s ideas of common decency, you wouldn’t be able to submit much. Female hair? Nope, no-go for some Muslims. Soles of feet or shoes? Serious insult in Thailand. Female breasts in America are “indecent”, in Europe, they’re fine. Europe has more people. Which is more common between them?

Then there are the people like us, for whom the entire concept of censoring everything so as not to offend anyone, anywhere, goes against common decency and sense. Not offending anyone is simply not possible. Hell, photography itself is against common decency in some parts of the world. Congratulations, you just invalidated WPPD’s entire existence. If you really believe this, it’s time to quit photography altogether.

And part of our definition of common decency is that people not imply an inherent equation between pornography and disrespect for human rights.

This also contradicts rule 5 above.

 

(9) [the photograph] must not have been previously published.

a) Why? This is not a rhetorical question.

b) If they are actually trying to grab at least a window of exclusivity—which alone would prevent either of us from submitting work, because it seems unreasonable and pointless—this isn’t going to do it. You are following this rule if you upload it to WPPD, and then your own site, or Flickr, 10 seconds later. What exactly does this accomplish? Nothing, other than setting up an arbitrary and useless hoop to jump through. Who are the WPPD team to tell anyone in which order they may upload things?

c) What, precisely, does “published” mean? In what media with what audience? If you put it in a protected area of your web site, or a photo sharing site, does that count as published?

 

(10) Each author must be able to provide proof that the submitted photograph is not contrary to other people’s fundamental rights. (The submitter must ensure that all allowances to photograph and publish pictures showing personal objects have been obtained by the models and/or owners of pictured objects.)

a) The first section of this rule is problematic. You want proof of a negative—which is generally impossible—for something that’s undefined? “Fundamental rights” can mean anything.

b) This is so poorly worded that it means that permission is required to show pictures of objects, but not of people, and the permission has to be granted to the owners of the objects. We don’t think this was the meaning the organizers were looking for, and would suggest they meant, “The submitter must ensure that all permissions to photograph and publish pictures showing people or personal objects have been obtained from the models and/or owners of pictured objects.”

Assuming that the rule is intended to mean that it is the photographer needs these permissions, we run into some more trouble:

i) Permission to depict “personal objects”? Again, we’ve got another term that’s so vague as to be meaningless. As potential submitters, we have no idea what this means, and therefore have no idea which images are acceptable to submit and which are not.

ii) Permission isn’t defined, either, which is a real problem. In the US, it’s legal to photograph anything in public view (with a few exceptions for military bases and the like), because in public, there is no reasonable expectation of privacy. Therefore, one could argue—as many have successfully done in court [most recently, see Nussenzweig v. diCorcia, US]—that by simply being in public, one is implicitly consenting to have their person and accompanying objects photographed.

This seems to be a wholly unreasonable demand. If you wanted to submit a photo of a street, would you have to get an OK from the owner of every car, building, and shop? What about litter? Each piece belonged to someone at some point. Does the fact that something is abandoned make it no longer a personal object?

It seems the only way to know for sure that you’re not running afoul of this rule is to make sure that the only things depicted in the photo you submit are yourself and things that you own. This contradicts rule 5, “[the photograph] can be of any subject”.

 

(11) To be submitted, a so-called “submission” must include both a scanned photograph and a completed Submission Form.

This is fine in principle, but use of the word “scanned” is unnecessarily limiting and confusing. Rule 4 states, “[the photograph] can be made by using any photographic material: film, paper, liquid emulsion, B&W, color, and any photographic process.” “Any photographic process” includes digital, so why a scan? What about people who shoot their negatives with digital cameras because they don’t have scanners? Does the requirement of a scan mean that digital isn’t actually allowed? It’s included in “any photographic process”, because digital is a process takes in light (photo) and puts out an image (graph), but it isn’t named explicitly. And they said “and any photographic process”, not “or”. So what’s the deal?

(This is the problem with having an incomplete list of things in a set of rules. If you’re not going to list everything, why bother enumerating anything at all when “any photographic process” covers it nicely? When everything you list is analog and digital isn’t mentioned, it raises questions.)

 

(16) Members of the coordinating team have authority to interpret and apply all necessary rules to all submissions received and may use their descretion and judgment in deciding which images to accept for the exhibition. Their decisions are final.

So basically, here’s all the rules, but they don’t really matter because we can bend them any way we want, and there’s nothing you can do about it.

 

(18) The coordinating team reserves the right to modify the rules of the operation if they judge necessary; in such an event, decisions of the organizers are final.

This is dangerous, unacceptable bullshit! The coordinating team could retroactively change the usage rights to say, “ha ha, we own the copyright to your images now, sucker!”. Or reverse rule 1 and say, “surprise, there are entry and exhibition fees now, and since you already entered and exhibited, you owe us $1,000!”.

ARE YOU INSANE??!? No thanks. If you expect me to play by your ill thought-out rules, you’d damn well better do the same.

 

(20) The act of participating in the WPPD implies whole acceptance of all rules and conditions presented here.

What exactly constitutes “participating in WPPD”? Is it uploading a lensless image made on pinhole day to the WPPD web site? Is it participating in a pinhole workshop on the date of WPPD? Is it making any lensless image whatsoever on the date of WPPD?

This stunning lack of specificity means that they could be trying to say that any act of lensless imaging that occured on 29 April, 2007, are bound by these rules. This, combined with rule 18, is insanely dangerous. Not that it’s likely, but they could attempt a rights grab at an image made on the day by someone who’s never even heard of WPPD! This confusion could have been avoided by rewording this point to something along the lines of, “By uploading an image that is accepted for display on the pinholeday.org site, you agree that you have accepted all rules and conditions presented in this document”.

A serious legal concern with these rules is the dangerous combination of rules 18 and 20.

By accepting all the terms and conditions, you agree that you accept any possible changes to the rules that might be applied at any point in the future, and applied retroactively. While we don’t expect that the WPPD team would ever be evil, it’s foolish to sign up to something like this. You could, for example, agree to the current terms (even the very confusing ones) and later find out that yes, someone else now owns all the rights on your image, and so you are in expensive breach of contract with another organisation, to whom you have sold exclusive print rights.

Agreeing to something so flawed and hoping that a loophole like this will never be exploited is naive.

 

We each had a lot of fun shooting on Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day, but you can bet your rent money that we won’t be submitting anything under these terms. I sincerely hope this gets straightened out for next year, because it’s an otherwise extremely cool event.

So where to go from here? We encourage the WPPD team to re-think the rules. The basic idea of WPPD is, in our opinion, both excellent and exciting. We think we should not go off on a “WPPD SUCKS!” campaign. While this year’s rules deserve to be scrapped, the event itself deserves to be celebrated and supported. If the rules don’t sit right with you, we encourage you to write a polite message to the WPPD team at the designated email address, support@pinholeday.org, and tell them that you’d like to see them changed for next year. Or, they could make the one possible good use of rule 18 (the rules are whatever we say they are) and retroactively change this year’s rules to something sane.

Nicolai Morrisson & Katie Cooke

 

UPDATE, 3 March 2007, 11:30pm GMT -5 (US EST)
We posted a copy of this to the f295 Pinhole Forum at the same time it was posted posted here (about 9 hours ago) as it seemed relevant. I just discovered that the thread has been deleted. It was located at f295 Pinhole Forum -> Thoughts and Observations: General Discussion -> Serious concerns about WPPD terms (last part now dead).

No word from the WPPD team yet.

It’s Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day!

Today, Sunday, 29 April, 2007, is Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day! Get out and shoot, then upload your best shot to the 2007 gallery!

There are heaps of workshops around the world that cover both camera building and shooting and processing, check the WPPD events page for something near you.

More info at pinholeday.org.

I’ll be heading out with a Zero Image Zero 69 in each hand, doing my best to make a dent in the freezerful (plus two crisper drawers, plus some overflow, erg) of expired film taking over my kitchen cooling unit. Get shooting!!

Reminder: Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day 2007 is this Sunday!

Reminder: this year’s Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day is this Sunday, 29 April, 2007! Get or make a pinhole camera, shoot on Sunday, and upload your best shot to the 2007 gallery (also check out previous years).

There are heaps of workshops around the world on Pinhole Day that cover both camera building and shooting and processing, check the WPPD events page for something near you.

 

Need a pinhole camera? If you want to buy one, have a look at:

  • 8banners are a China-based camera company that have several interesting models available
  • B&H Photo carry pinhole cameras from 35mm to 4×5
  • Calumet have body caps that you can use with existing rangefinder or SLR bodies through 4×5 cameras
  • Holgamods have several Holga-based pinhole cameras, as well as pinhole body caps for your existing Canon EOS, Nikon, Olympus, Pentax, Sony Aplha/Minolta SLR, Mamiya 645, and Kiev 60 & 88/Pentacon 6/Exakta 66 cameras
  • Pinhole Blender, a unique, multi-aperture camera, in 35mm or medium format
  • Zero Image cameras, 35mm through 4×5, stocked by Calumet and B&H
 

If you want to make a camera, check out:

Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day 2007

Tom Miller, coordinator of Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day, writes:

Dear Fellow Pinhole Photographer,

The coordinators of the seventh Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day are busy preparing for this upcoming major global festival. It will be the traditional last Sunday in April; the next one will be April 29, 2007. Anyone, anywhere in the world, who makes a pinhole photograph on Pinhole Day, can scan the image and upload it to the pinholeday.org website where it will become part of this premier gallery of lenless photography.

Last year, 2267 participants from 60 countries contributed images to the WPPD 2006 Gallery. Over 100 events – workshops, exhibits, lectures, etc. – were held throughout the world. All of these events were coordinated by volunteers.

If you don’t have this celebration marked on your calendar please do it soon! Join the world in this joyous celebration of simple photography.

Watch the pinholeday.org website for more information.

HOW YOU CAN HELP…

  • We are looking for help with our publicity efforts in various countries and regions. These local or regional coordinators would be part of the team that our Publicity Coordinator, Stefano Piva, is assembling to spread the word about our sublime, yet joyously wacky, annual pinhole exhibit. Mostly this would be emails to publications, schools, galleries, etc, in your area. If you would like to help with this effort, please contact publicity@pinholeday.org.
  • If you’d like to organize an event, such as a workshop, lecture or a photo “shoot”, you can add it to the events calendar at pinholeday.org/events or contact events@pinholeday.org. An event can be a simple as a pinhole excursion with friends or interested photographers, or it can be a workshop or exhibit. Check the "Workshop Planning Guide" on the Pinhole Day Resource page for ideas.
  • If you are a teacher, your students can participate in WPPD as a group. To do this, enter your class’s participation as an event at pinholeday.org/events/addevent.php. Choose "classroom" as the type of event. Your class will be listed as a "group" in the gallery. When your class is selected from the group list, it will create a virtual exhibit of your students’ work.
  • If you are a graphic designer… we’re interested in suggestions for a new, or alternative, logos. Please submit your ideas to support@pinholeday.org.

We have two new members of the coordinating team. A welcome to Jason Schlauch, our new webmaster. He is taking the reigns from Gregg Kemp, who designed, built and maintained the website since the first celebration. Many thanks to Gregg for his dedication over the years. The website is the hub of Pinhole Day activity, and it is wonderful that Jason is organizing this critical area. A welcome to our new education coordiator, Chuck Flagg, taking over for long-time coordinator Rosanne Stutts. Chuck is a high-school art teacher who incorporates pinhole into his students’ activities and who has been active in the online pinhole community.

Another major holiday is in the works for April 29, 2007! We all look forward to your photograph in the 2007 gallery.

WPPD 2007 Coordinating Team

Tom Miller (Lead – USA)
Nick Dvoracek (Support – USA)
Chuck Flagg (Education – USA)
Tom Persinger (Events – USA)
Stefano Piva (Publicity – Italia)
Jason Schlauch (Webmaster – USA)
Wolfgang Thoma (Translations – Belgium)

Unauthorized WPPD-branded pinhole cameras

Tom Miller posted this to Pinhole Visions and the Spitbite Pinhole Mailing List. I’m re-posting it in its entirety:

Dear Photography Enthusiast,

The Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day (WPPD) coordinators noticed that commercial pinhole cameras engraved with our name and logo are being offered for sale. This is being done without the authorization of the Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day organization.

Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day is a community service organization operated as a not-for-profit; we are not a commercial enterprise. We don’t sell anything, but exist only to benefit all people by providing information about pinhole photography and by providing a gallery open for all people to post one pinhole photograph as part of the annual Pinhole Day celebration.

While we encourage people to use our artwork to promote the Pinhole Day event, we do not authorize use of our name and artwork for commercial purposes. Please keep this in mind if you are considering a purchase of a camera with our name and logo on it, as the purchase does not benefit Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day. Thank you for your understanding.

Tom Miller, on behalf of the
Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day Coordinating Team

Countdown: TOMORROW (Sun) is Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day!

Worldwide Pinhole Photography Day is only one week away! If you want to participate, make sure you’ve got a camera built or bought in time by April 30, 2006!

See pinholeday.org for more info on the event. If you’d like to convert an existing camera or build one from scratch, the f295 Pinhole Photography Forum is an excellent resource.

There’s a long list of events and workshops happening, check out the list to see if there’s one near you.