BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Traditional large format cameras and digital sensors were generally not designed to work together; for the most part, they were not even manufactured during the same decades. In recent years, one inventor has attempted to bridge this divide by creating photographic stitching device with limited capability, permitting photographers to construct composite images from multiple digital captures through a fixed large format lens.
PRIOR ART
The closest preceding invention is an apparatus which permits four-frame and nine-frame stitching of digital images within the film plane (U.S. Pat. No. 8,538,253). That invention integrates with existing large format cameras by replacing the detachable film holder with the apparatus and an external digital sensor. It utilizes the existing full-frame camera bellows and a mask that slides with the sensor's planar movements to block light from the rear frame. The mask protrudes from the outside of the frame when the sensor is shifted to various positions, which limits the overall compositional motion of the camera collectively described by the Scheimpflug principle.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
- 1. A rigid exterior frame 1 made of metal such as aluminum, steel, brass, or bronze: 1) attaches to external camera frame 5, and; 2) holds an interior frame 2.
- 2. A rigid metal interior frame 2 made of machined metal such as aluminum, steel, brass, or bronze: 1) slides along a single translational axis within parallel channels of an exterior frame 1, and; 2) holds an internal mount 7.
- 3. An internal mount 2 made of machined metal such as aluminum, steel, or brass, or bronze slides along a single translational axis (orthogonal to the axis described above in #2), and provides a mounting surface for: 1) an external detachable digital sensor 6 and; 2) a flexible bellows 3 made of opaque material such as nylon, leather, or cotton.
- 4. The flexible bellows 3 blocks external light from striking the sensor 6 and attaches to: 1) the internal mount 2, and 2) the lens mount of an external camera 4.
- 5. The external bellows 3 attaches to the internal mount 7 using magnets, and is guided into place by a protruding alignment guide that mates with a groove on the mount and also serves as a light-tight baffle.
- 6. The exterior frame 1 and interior frame 2 possess several detents, which allow for easy repositioning of the internal mount 7 at evenly spaced intervals for rapid accurate positioning by hand.
- 7. The internal mount 7 is comprised of two distinct pieces: 1) a mounting device for mating to external digital imaging sensors 6, and; 2) a detachable plate which mates to the partial frame bellows 3.
- 8. The apparatus is used in conjunction with a detachable digital imaging sensor 6, an external camera frame 5, and an external lens 4. When these items are assembled, the photographer may compose an image over the virtual image plane coincident with the digital sensor. This composition involves moving the exterior frame throughout six degrees of freedom (3 translational and 3 rotational). Upon completing the composition, the photographer may then capture individual segments of the virtual image plane that are transmitted through partial frame bellows.
DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
- 1. FIG. 1 shows the apparatus in perspective from the front. The exterior frame 1 is attached to the camera frame 5.
- 2. FIG. 2 shows the apparatus in perspective from the rear. In this view, the digital back 6 obscures the sliding internal mount 7.
- 3. FIG. 3 shows the apparatus from the rear. In this depiction, the exterior frame 1 holds a laterally sliding interior frame 2, which in turn holds a vertically sliding internal mount 7. The interior and exterior frames both have channels cut to allow for the precise linear motion of their internal components along a single axis. The internal mount is shown in two positions, lowered partially and raised partially. The bellows 3 and detachable digital sensor 6 are omitted for clarity.
- 4. FIG. 4 shows the identical view point of FIG. 3, but depicts the internal sliding frame in two positions, partially left and partially right.
- 5. FIG. 5 shows the apparatus from the top with bellows 3 and digital sensor 6 attached. The sliding interior frame 2 and partial-frame bellows 3 are depicted in two positions, partially left and right.
- 6. FIG. 6 shows the apparatus from the side with bellows 3 and digital sensor 6 attached. The sliding internal mount 7 is depicted in two positions, partially raised and partially lowered.
- 7. FIG. 7 shows the detachable mounting plate 8 and partial frame bellows 3 from the rear. The double-thick line denotes the protruding alignment guide 10. The magnets 9 hold the plate in place on the internal sliding mount 7.
- 8. FIG. 8 shows the internal sliding mount 7 from the front surface, which mates with the detachable mounting plate 8. The protruding alignment guide of FIG. 7 mates with the groove 11, depicted with a double-thick line. The magnets 12 coincide with the magnets 9 on the detachable mounting plate.