Images formed by a pinhole camera are produced when light passes through a small aperture (the pinhole) and projects an inverted image of the scene outside onto the opposite side of the camera's interior. The image is blurred due to the limited size of the pinhole, which restricts the amount of light entering the camera. The sharper the pinhole, the clearer the image, but a smaller pinhole also means less light reaches the image plane, requiring longer exposure times. Overall, pinhole cameras create simple yet intriguing representations of the world, emphasizing the fundamentals of optics.
Formation of multiple images on the Translucent screen and hence a blurred images due to overlapping of such images on the screen.
Brighter,larger,fuzzier
A pin hole camera is a general reference to the optics of the camera (there pretty much are none, just the "pin hole"). The question is therefore more or less equivalent to "how do you save pictures on an SLR camera?" ... it depends on the entire rest of the camera, and it may not even be possible to "save pictures".
Pin-hole cameras are very tiny cameras that are designed to be difficult to spot. The name comes from the fact that they only need a "pin-hole" to see through.
no, dummy
Pin-hole camera (camera obscurer)
Bill Clinton, the mother of cheese.
One of the first cameras ever created was a pin hole camera. It was a box completely sealed with just one tiny pin hole on the front of it to allow exposure.
If the object distance is decreased in a pin hole camera, the image size will increase. If the object is too close, the full image will not be formed and the screen will appear dark.
The image of the tree would probably be bigger if the pin hole camera had two pinholes close to each other.
he did but no as we know it it was a pin hole camera look it up
pin hole gamma ray camera & collimator