It's breathtaking! Everything that you need is included in the package. The Sharan STD135's elegant hard-card curves are especially easy to setup, with an assembly time of around an hour. Get cracking!
Get it Together
We hear you out there. The demand for do-it-yourself pinhole kits has quickly risen to a thundering pitch, and we're scrambling to test and offer as many as we can. In the course of our travels, we happened upon this little beauty. Crafted in Japan, the STD-135 is in a league of its own
Fast DIY construction
Whether you've been taking photos for 20 days or 20 years, take it from me that nothing compares to the feeling of shooting with an instrument that you've builtwith your own hands.
Editorial Review:
Product Description: Crafted in Japan, this is a do-it-yourself pinhole camera in a league of its own. First off, it uses the easy 35mm film & normal development that we all knowand love. As with all things pinhole, you'll get dreamy soft focus images with straight wide-angle lines and endless depth of field. Its 20mm angle of view captures a fat & wide chunk of everything in front of the camera. It's constructed of sturdy 1mm paper card, secured with rubber bands, and includes all the tape and fixins that you need. We clocked about 1 hour from unpacking tocomplete assembly. Not to mention, this little guy is cute as a button and unbelievably functional once it's all put together. You've seen them around those enormous digital SLR cameras that are absolutely bursting with bells and whistles. There's a huge lens protruding from the front,a big-ass flash charging on the top, and a fat battery pack strapped to the bottom. A touch of the shutter button activates 167 focus points and rapid fires400 shots of 12 megapixels each. Not quite pocket-sized, each one weighs approximately as much as a 1971 Volkswagen. Now, let's imagine the absolute polar opposite to this scenario. Imagine that nothing even a lens separates the outside world from your film. It's a bit difficult to visualize, as your very own eyes even serve as lenses. Pinholes work on one of the most fundamental and basic laws of light: diffraction. As light passes through a small point, it can yield an organized yet