chadstrongballs cross-posted this post in Black And White 3 years ago


Building Your Own Tools in the Digital Age: LightBox/Slide and Negative viewer and Scanner

in Build-It3 years ago

Hey everyone, I saw this community the other day and was excited to see such a thriving do it yourself community here. Kind of epic that a platform where we can trade ideas and skills AND get paid for it exists. I will probably post here fairly regularly in the future since I seem to always have some project going, to start with I have a quick project I did today in the long tradition of DIYers and craftsmen making their own tools.

Something about making a useful tool is especially satisfying, it's maybe the feeling of your skills multiplying. You learn to use tools to make the things floating around in your head, and then you realize one day you have enough knowledge and skills to build new tools to solve new problems, or better solve problems you had struggled to solve before. It's something that I sometimes feel is missing from our modern society where so much work is done digitally, and so many products are designed to be disposable and closed off to the tinkering impulses of the user; so when I can use my modest fabrication skills to build tools that help work I am doing in the digital world I tend to jump at it.

So rambling introduction aside. I have been tasked recently with digitizing a collection of family photos in the form of Slides and negatives. One option was to spend 150 dollars or more for a commercial slide digitizer, but I felt like I could do the same thing with my phone's camera IF I had a lightbox.

This ended up being about a 2 hour build, low to moderate difficulty, and it could be done entirely with handtools if needed. You will need some type of saw, a straight edge and ruler to mark your cuts, a couple of bar clamps, some wood glue, a hammer, and some finishing nails. I also used some chisels and a rabbit plane to make the phone holding platform, it could have been done without those but I wanted to use up a scrap of lumber I had and it was a bit thicker than I expected.

A lightbox for those who don't know is exactly what it sounds like. It's a box with a light inside and a glasstop, usually the top has a frosted quality or a white coating. Tattoo artists use them to set up stencils, and animators use them to for frame by frame drawing. They are also used quite often by archivists to view slides.

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