I made an Instax pinhole print by taking one sheet out of its original cartridge, then loading and exposing it in a little tin can pinhole, then unloading it out of the tin can pinhole back into its original cartridge and putting that back in the instax camera, thus ejecting it to squash the chem pod and develop the print.....whew!
Yes it's a lot of work for a small reward...but hey, it is fun, and it's easier and easier the more you do it.
Here's my favorite of the ones I've done of the volcano that's been erupting since late March in Iceland.
I'm holding the small print in front of the TV screen.
I did this one Wednesday night when the house was dark and I could eliminate extra glare off the TV screen. The pinhole camera was about 8 inches from the TV and the exposure was 4 minutes long.
Instax is ISO 800 and it has to be exposed through the back side of the little print.
I don't think I violated any copyrights as my hubby thinks this is fair use....we can discuss that later.....