Difference between revisions of "Spinner 360°"
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− | + | The [[Lomography|Lomographic]] '''Spinner 360°'''<ref>The bottom of the handle carries the inscription: 'Spinner Dolphin 360°'</ref> is a mechanical 360 degree [[panorama camera]] powered by a spring-driven clockwork mechanism that rotates the entire camera head and smoothly advances the [[35mm]] film. It was introduced in 2010<ref>[https://microsites.lomography.com/spinner-360/history/ Panoramic 360 degree History] at [https://www.lomography.com/ Lomography]</ref>.The Spinner 360° is based on the principle of a slit camera whereby the film is moved at a set speed behind a slit aperture that exposes a continuous panorama onto the moving film. A pull cord winds the clockwork for a single shot (or fraction thereof if not fully pulled). The film transport is effected by a rubber band. The 35mm camera is produced in China. | |
− | The [[Lomography|Lomographic]] Spinner 360° is a mechanical 360 degree [[panorama camera]] powered by a spring-driven clockwork mechanism that rotates the entire camera head and smoothly advances the [[35mm]] film. The Spinner 360° is based on the principle of a slit camera whereby the film is moved at a set speed behind a slit aperture that exposes a continuous panorama onto the moving film. A pull cord winds the clockwork for a single shot (or fraction thereof if not fully pulled). The film transport is effected by a rubber band. The 35mm camera is produced in China. | ||
The Spinner 360° has two settings, 'cloudy' (approx. f/8) and 'sunny' (approx. f/16). The rotation speed depends on the fatigue of the rubber band, according to the product literature, is to vary between 1/125th and 1/250th sec. The available exposure options leave much to chance and variability is high. | The Spinner 360° has two settings, 'cloudy' (approx. f/8) and 'sunny' (approx. f/16). The rotation speed depends on the fatigue of the rubber band, according to the product literature, is to vary between 1/125th and 1/250th sec. The available exposure options leave much to chance and variability is high. | ||
+ | Comparable, but mechanically more reliable cameras are the [[Globuscope]] and the [[Seitz|Seitz Roundshot]]. | ||
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+ | == Notes == | ||
+ | <references/> | ||
==Links== | ==Links== | ||
*[http://microsites.lomography.com/spinner-360/ Lomography Site] | *[http://microsites.lomography.com/spinner-360/ Lomography Site] | ||
+ | *[https://issuu.com/lomography/docs/spinner_360_manual/4 Spinner 360° user manual] at [https://issuu.com/ issuu.com] | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Panorama]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Film cameras still in production]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Lomography]] | ||
+ | [[Category:S]] | ||
+ | [[Category:2010]] |
Latest revision as of 03:36, 30 April 2024
Lomographic Spinner 360° image by Dirk HR Spennemann (Image rights) |
The Lomographic Spinner 360°[1] is a mechanical 360 degree panorama camera powered by a spring-driven clockwork mechanism that rotates the entire camera head and smoothly advances the 35mm film. It was introduced in 2010[2].The Spinner 360° is based on the principle of a slit camera whereby the film is moved at a set speed behind a slit aperture that exposes a continuous panorama onto the moving film. A pull cord winds the clockwork for a single shot (or fraction thereof if not fully pulled). The film transport is effected by a rubber band. The 35mm camera is produced in China.
The Spinner 360° has two settings, 'cloudy' (approx. f/8) and 'sunny' (approx. f/16). The rotation speed depends on the fatigue of the rubber band, according to the product literature, is to vary between 1/125th and 1/250th sec. The available exposure options leave much to chance and variability is high.
Comparable, but mechanically more reliable cameras are the Globuscope and the Seitz Roundshot.
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Lomographic Spinner 360° |
image by Frank Hormann (Image rights) |
Notes
- ↑ The bottom of the handle carries the inscription: 'Spinner Dolphin 360°'
- ↑ Panoramic 360 degree History at Lomography