DIY Cardboard Hasselblad Pinhole Camera
Adam @ Make: Online points us to Kelly Angood’s homemade cardboard pinhole camera, dolled up to look like a Hasselblad. It takes 120 film.
Adam @ Make: Online points us to Kelly Angood’s homemade cardboard pinhole camera, dolled up to look like a Hasselblad. It takes 120 film.
Check out this Hasselblad pinhole camera from Kelly Angood. It accepts 120 film and looks looks a little less conspicuous than an oatmeal container.
This week in the MAKE Flickr pool we saw:
Final Aztec coin by onorio.depiro.
Hot rod soldering iron by Jonathan M. Guberman.
Legs!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! by Lenny&Meriel.
Putting out the Fire by norrislabs
stereo – april 1979 by lookseeseen,
Handmade Synthesizer by MichaelRucci.
The iPhone Guru posted this how-to on making your own infrared transmitter so that you can use your iOS device (such as iPhone, iPod Touch, or iPad) as a remote control for your DSLR. This hack is a quick one and you may even have the required components already. On the software side, you’ll need […]
I thought disposable film cameras were getting ready to enter the “antique” category, but Photojojo has a fun post giving you 20 ways to use a disposable camera, such as turning it into a 3D camera.
I recall turning my folks’ little black and white kitchen TV on and off over and over again, as a child, just so I could watch the screen flash as the tube lost power. This modern project, from photographer Stephan Tillmans, is called Luminant Point Arrays. [via adafruit]
I was looking for something cheery to post in honor of the arrival of Spring, and I don’t think it gets any better than the dreamy photos of Dutch photographer Sebastiaan Bremer.