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Citrus Turned Into a Pinhole Camera: 'Oranges Can Take Photos' | PetaPixel

A viral TikTok video claiming that “oranges can take photos” proves that pinhole cameras can be made out of literally anything, including citrus fruit.

The since-deleted video was reuploaded to Reddit and by another TikTok creator. It starts by showing oranges being picked from a tree before one is selected and sliced in half. Endoscope Lens

Citrus Turned Into a Pinhole Camera: 'Oranges Can Take Photos' | PetaPixel

It is then squeezed of all its juices and a black liner is put inside the two halves. A hole is made in the skin for the orange’s rudimentary lens and then a small sheet with a pinhole is placed behind it.

Viewers get a shot of a stack of oranges with tape holding together the sliced fruits, and with tape also covering the pinhole.

The citrussy camera is then taken out into the world and placed on a light stand, once again held with tape and not with the standard 1/4-inch thread.

Finally, the orange is thrown into a traditional film developer and the creators reveal the resulting photos taken on the clementine camera. The photos are classic pinhole shots; black-and-white, unsharp, and distorted.

The clever video never mentions the word pinhole or alludes to how the orange is really taking photos. Non-photographers may be heading to the store to buy clementines to take their holiday pictures on this year.

“So yeah, oranges can take photos. But, it’s not the oranges taking the photo, you’re actually making a pinhole camera out of an orange,” explains Dave Constine, owner of a photography tips page on TikTok.

“You need to have the round of the orange and it has to be black inside. So you use some cardboard and black paper, and then what you do is you take a piece of film.

“You’re going to cut out your film paper and you put it inside the orange and you tape it all up and then you can bring your orange outside and open up your pinhole and expose it for about 30 seconds and then you can bring it back in and you get those images.”

The one step that Constine missed is the orange must be opened inside a darkroom where the photo-sensitive paper can be safely taken out without receiving any more light. The film paper is then processed by dipping it into liquid chemicals and the picture magically appears.

Citrus Turned Into a Pinhole Camera: 'Oranges Can Take Photos' | PetaPixel

Industrial Endoscope Lens It’s clear that whoever made the video was having some fun by playing fast and loose with the truth while taking advantage of the mystical world of analog photography.