Sunday, 10 February 2019

Scan-O-Cam: - workshop experiment and innovation


A year or two ago I made a prototype scanner-camera.  It was a simple proof-of-concept lash-up using a Canon flatbed scanner, some foam board and a magnifying glass lens. With a little tweaking* I made it work well enough to show the idea had promise. The mark 2 'posh' version still hasn't been made but I've kept the original in its crude sticky-taped form to use in UCA photo workshops.
*( full article another time - I promise!)
The Scan-O-Cam Mk 1: Materials: Canon LIDE scanner, foam board boxes, magnifying glass, sticky tape.

This year's BA Photo workshop on experimental cameras was a great success.  Everyone got into the spirit of making, hacking and creatively experimenting with all sorts of stuff and some really great pictures were made on the scanner camera.

COLOUR:
The scanner isn't designed to work with a transmitted light image. It fires rapid flashes of red, green and blue light at the platen surface, expecting it to be reflected back by the document it's scanning.  I partially disable the light so the sensor sees the image produced by the lens instead.  This is effectively monochrome but by doing three scanning passes with a red, green or blue filter in turn a composite colour image can be made. - Thanks to Greg Jones for his work on the colour combination technique.

Here's an example. Three scan-photos of Larry were made in succession:
red filter...........................................................green filter.......................................................blue filter
The camera and subject need to stay still and in register for each scan. - not easy for portraits!

The red, green and blue image files are combined by pasting into the R,G,B channels in Photoshop (I will publish a more detailed article later) and a colour image results:
Red, green and blue images combined in Photoshop

MOVEMENT:
The scanner moves horizontally and relatively slowly even at low resolution. This gives a lot of scope for deliberate movements during the exposure.  Cue some really innovative and interesting experiments:

If the subject moves in the opposite direction to the scan it appears compressed:
Meg moved in the same direction as the scan so she's compressed while the background is unaffected 

Standing still but jumping sideways successively gives a multiple subjects:
" Lots of Meg" - I think this one is my favourite.

Moving up and down during the scan distorts as zigzag lines:
Truly surreal... Josh waved both arms and legs during the scan

Another great image - plus what appears to be an insect on the scanner glass?


Thanks to everyone in the workshop for these images - Some very experimental and original ideas. Well done!


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