Nice work. Look forwards to seeing more.
I've restored two half plate cameras this year with new bellows, backs and fronts. These 100 plus year old cameras were very well built and can be put in action again.
Nice work. Look forwards to seeing more.
I've restored two half plate cameras this year with new bellows, backs and fronts. These 100 plus year old cameras were very well built and can be put in action again.
Great job! After you clean the metal parts, do you coat them with anything?
“You often feel tired, not because you've done too much, but because you've done too little of what sparks a light in you.”
― Alexander Den Heijer, Nothing You Don't Already Know
I had a project similar and there were a number before mine. Your's looks good so far!
My thread here (pictures are mostly gone, but re-posted at the end of the thread)
https://www.largeformatphotography.i...10-Restoration
Me too but I will worry about it after I get a back and new bellows.
No, I will see how it ages. I would like them to get some patina again but if it gets too bad, I will start over and coat them. That's not the biggest job to do.
Thanks for the link. Your Century looks a lot like mine, I will read your topic with interest.
"The wood was left as it was and just rubbed with olive oil."
Might you face a problem of it going rancid at some point? Mixing with lemon juice is supposed to solve that problem. Finding pure Olive Oil is not as easy as it seems. Too many on the market are actually blends, even when claiming to be pure.
Tung Oil as a finish may be a better choice as it doesn't have the problem.
” Never attribute to inspiration that which can be adequately explained by delusion”.
Ah! I have been using the same oil a couple years ago on the wood of a coffee grinder and it still looks and smell good. I don't use much oil, just enough on a paper towell to give the wood some shine so hopefully it will be OK.
There is not much to say about the latest work but I did everything I could do with the method explained above. Now I can put the camera on a shelve until I get a back and bellows.
For the back and ground glass frame, I'm hoping to find original ones but if it takes too long, I have found drawings to make them or more likely to have them made:
http://web.archive.org/web/200409140...ail/camera.htm
For the bellows, the inner material has very little light leaks so I might to repair the outside layer. I did it on the bellows of a 4x5 camera with rubber glue and acrylic paint and it doesn't look pretty but there are no more leaks.
It's looking very good. Nice work!
“You often feel tired, not because you've done too much, but because you've done too little of what sparks a light in you.”
― Alexander Den Heijer, Nothing You Don't Already Know
Thank you, I like your Century too. I am planing to use mine but I hope it won't take too long to get the missing parts.
By the way, does anyone know if all 8x10 backs from Kodak, Rochester, Century of that era era will fit my camera?
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