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I knew this had to happen eventually. Someone finally developed a digital camera in the form factor of a roll of 35mm film. That means you can just pop it in your regular ol' film camera, and boom, it's digital.
YouTuber befinitiv has published a video where he shows how he updated an old Cosina Hi-Lite film camera with a cartridge-based on a Raspberry Pi that turned the analog camera into one capable of capturing digital photos and videos.
Befinitiv�s video shows curious minds how to build a custom film cartridge that turns any analog camera into a digital camera. With it, a photographer is able to drag any analog 35mm camera into the modern day.
�It can do everything you would expect from a digital camera nowadays,� he says. �It can do video, it can stream video over WiFi, and can store things on an SD card.�
As noted by Hackaday, the design swaps the film canister that would normally be used with a Raspberry Pi Zero that is attached to a 3D-printed case which mimics the shape of the film canister and also houses and affixes the Pi camera in the location where the film would normally be exposed to light � behind the camera�s shutter.
He removed the Pi camera�s lens to instead use his Cosina camera�s own optics and shows how he is able to take digital photos with the film camera that are of surprisingly decent quality.
�[The Pi camera] behaves as the film did,� he explains
The custom cartridge is powered by a small battery and converter that are housed in the 3D-printed film cartridge section. The whole unit fits nicely into the camera and allows the rear plate to cleanly close over it.
In addition to turning the film camera into one that can capture digital photos, as noted it is also capable of video features. Video can be broadcast to a phone or computer over WiFi via the Raspberry Pi.
In his video, befinitiv shows that this particular implementation has, as he says, �quite an insane zoom� because of the Pi Camera�s tiny sensor, which makes it hard to see what he is looking at. That said, he has full access to focusing that allows him to get sharp images, despite the zoom.
�I couldn�t really tell from this that it was shot on a 50-year-old camera,� he says when analyzing the video feed. �It looks pretty much like a digital camera to me.�
That�s likely because it is, and the optics on the old film camera are perfectly suitable for the small sensor on the Pi Camera.
�I am really happy how this turned out,� he concludes. �It actually gives some interesting and nice-looking images. And it feels so weird having this old-school camera doing live streams here over WiFi and recording video. It�s really an odd feeling, but a really fun one. I can only recommend also build something for your cameras because it is really fun and gives these things a new life, which is I think always great for great, high quality, retro-tech items.�