Bellows Material - might have found the answer
My Grover 8x10 project has quickly gone from fabricating a tailboard to completely refinishing and refreshing the camera. Is it worth the effort in the eyes of many, probably not, but the idea of working with what I have is appealing and will make for an interesting story and a one of a kind camera at the very least.
Which brings me to bellows. I'm going to replace the 50+ year old red bellows and make a new one. I'm not a fan of red and I'm not sure how much life they have left in them. After quite a bit of research here and on other sites the consensus has been that no one really knows what material to use for the outer layer and what material might be good is hard to find or cost prohibitive. My initial thought was purchasing more of the 70 denier blackout cloth I bought ten years ago for my wet plate dark box from Freestyle photo, but unfortunately it is no longer available. So down the internet rabbit hole I went and I think I may have found a good solution. There's a 70 denier/1.9 oz (pre coat) rip stop black out fabric from Seattle Fabrics for around $12 a yard. Seattle Fabrics is geared toward the sailing and marine world. It comes in black and has the option for the blackout coated side to come in white or black. I ordered two yards of 60" wide black/black for $34 with processing fee, tax, and shipping included. I think this may be similar to what Intrepid is using.
I'll post updates once the material arrives, but I have high hopes that this will be a good material for the application.
Re: Bellows Material - might have found the answer
Fascinating! How will you make the pleats?
Burke and James used to make a rubber coated black darkroom cloth that was fantastic and of course it is long out of production. I hate it when a great product is no longer produced.
Re: Bellows Material - might have found the answer
I have never made bellows and never will. I t occurs to me, however, that rip-stop nylon is very shiny stuff. Will you be coating it with some matte fluid?
Re: Bellows Material - might have found the answer
Bellows will be made in the traditional 3 layer laminate, cardstock for the ribs, book cloth or broad cloth for the interior lining.
Re: Bellows Material - might have found the answer
I hope it works out!
I've not had much luck making bellows....my attempt turned out light tight but too inflexible.
Re: Bellows Material - might have found the answer
I ordered this fabric to attempt to make a new 5x7 Speed Graflex shutter curtain, but in my research I've heard it can also be used for bellows. It's very thin and flexible, but also very slippery which might not be easy to work with.
Re: Bellows Material - might have found the answer
Re: Bellows Material - might have found the answer
Quote:
Originally Posted by
domaz
I ordered this fabric to attempt to make a new 5x7 Speed Graflex shutter curtain, but in my research I've heard it can also be used for bellows. It's very thin and flexible, but also very slippery which might not be easy to work with.
Note that they say to use 2 layers for very light sensitive applications.
Re: Bellows Material - might have found the answer
I've used this fabric for bellows before, it really does need two layers to fully block light but it's also very thin, I used a 4 layer laminate that was nylon, black paper for ribs, nylon and thin cotton on the inside to prevent reflections. The total thickness ended up being .55mm and it made for a flexible but springy bellows.
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Re: Bellows Material - might have found the answer
I just used household blackout curtain fabric. It's white, but it was what was locally available for $10/meter (in Canada). It's somewhat of a thicker fabric, but I liked how it turned out for an 8x10 bellows--giving the bellows a certain weighty feel and stiffness to it. I used cardboard ribs and just black broadcloth for the inner lining.
I made 2 bellows and made a different mistake on both of them: On the 8x10, I didn't alternate the narrow/wide ribs between the top/bottom and sides. Because the folds alternate between the top/sides, the ribs also need to alternate. This results in the bellows top/bottom folding flat, but the sides folding up/down. It still works, but doesn't fold flat.
The other bellows was a 5x7 and that I didn't measure it correctly: The top/bottom dimensions are the horizontal width of the opening of the back of the camera and lens standard. The side measurement is the length of the side minus the width of the top plus bottom ribs. The result was that the bellows was around 3/4" too large in the vertical dimension.
My next bellows should be good, but if you can avoid those 2 errors, making a bellows is totally doable, but fairly tedious. Both bellows had around 160 ribs each. In the end, it's quite a satisfying experience!
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