Saturday, August 27, 2011

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Photoshop Basics: Infinite Photo

Here's how to make a photo within itself. It's easy to get started. This is what you'll need:
-Camera
-Picture Frame
-Image-Editing Software(Photoshop, GIMP )



This tutorial is mirrored on Instructables.
Update: Instructables just featured this tutorial.
Step-by-Step after the the jump:

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

First Look With An Old Lens

My NEX-Nikon adapter came in today! That means I got to try out all of the new-old lenses that I have. The photos below are with a NIKKOR-S Auto 50mm at f1.4, circa 1969. I haven't edited them at all, aside from the watermarks. Take a look:

 These two were taken in my dark basement with one fluorescent light.
 Notice how small the focal plane is at f1.4.
This was taken in the back yard during the evening. I've concluded that the lens shifts toward red in low light, and blue in abundant light.

The complete lack of image stabilization is humbling, to say the least.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

New Glass!

Made a trip to my granddad's house today (James II) for his birthday. He has loads of photography experience and lent me a few of  his old Nikon lenses. I believe they're Vietnam War-Era.
Counterclockwise from the top:
NIKKOR-UD Auto, 1:3.5, f=20mm
NIKKOR-P Auto, 1:2.5, f=105mm
NIKKOR-S Auto, 1:1.4, f=50mm
NIKKOR-H Auto, 1:4.5, f=300mm


Can't wait to try them out. My Sony-Nikon adapter should be here by Wednesday.

Yo Dawg

Monday, August 1, 2011

Autodesk Now Owns Instructables

Original image I created for my instructables.com profile. (2007)

I've got mixed feelings about this. Every time Instructables works out the kinks of a new change, it seems, they change something else. Now, according to Eric Wilhelm, founder of instructables.com, Autodesk has acquired Instructables. 


An excerpt from the announcement:
"Instructables will still be the same site you love: we’ll keep the Instructables name and URL, the whole team is staying on, our policies haven’t changed, you still hold copyright to your projects, we’ll still run awesome contests, and the Robot isn’t going anywhere. However, we’ll now have the resources to make some improvements to the site I know our authors and community will love. Autodesk gives us the scale and support to grow and improve Instructables, build some great apps, and continue our mission of creating a positive impact on the world. Everyone on the Instructables team will become Autodesk employees, but we'll still wear our Robot t-shirts with pride."




Here's what I had to say on their feedback page
"I've been using Autodesk's free student software trials for three years now without a hitch (AutoCAD, Inventor). These have helped me greatly with projects and presentations in college and Inventor is my favorite 3D design software because of this. However, these free services aren't available to most adult users and would be too costly for hobby budgets. Seeing as the Instructables community is primarily open source, I don't see how Autodesk would increase sales by dominating the site's ad space.

As far as I can tell, the site doesn't have any issues that require Autodesk software to fix. I really hope there aren't any changes to the website. What does Autodesk have to contribute(besides money)? Maybe a Flash 3D viewing window for .ipt or .dwg files but that's all I can come up with.

What will happen if someone published a new hack or piece of software that would divert sales away from Autodesk? Before, advertisers had no say in what could be published, but now Austodesk has the potential to personally ban any user they deem unsatisfactory.

Do not change the editor.
Do not take away free features.
Do not integrate the Autodesk Design Community.
Do not increase ad space.
Do not add new membership requirements.

Do increase the staff's project budget.
Do add more sponsored contests.
Do continue to support open source, free information, and educational hacking.

Bottom line: If Autodesk gets any control over the community, it will be detrimental to the spirit of Instructables and open source. In the event that instructables.com becomes a restrictive environment, we'll simply stop contributing."



As you can tell, I'm not entirely convinced that this is an improvement. Instructables was the one thing that convinced me to share my work online. It gave me permission to engineer and learn through experimentation. I'd hate to see it fall to big business.