Blinding your friends with regular white flash: b0ring.
Why not try the 12-Color Splash Flash? It’s an adorable pocket flash for your camera.
Simply turn the color wheel to brighten up your pix with one of 12 bold hues.
Oh, so sleek!
Above is the first digital camera. It was made by Steve Sasson working for Kodak in 1975. 1975! Using “a lens from a Super 8 camera, a whole stack of ni-cad batteries, a digital to analog converter from a voltmeter, [and] a highly experimental CCD.” Oh and that cassette tape on the side, thats are how the pictures are stored.
The camera captured a 100-line image onto that cassette-tape, yet even that tiny picture took a mind-numbing 23 seconds to write. Playback was possibly clunkier still, using another tape-player hooked up to a frame-storing devices that interpolated those 100 lines to an NTSC-compatible 400-line image and then showed it on a regular TV-screen.
Though it was built in 1975 and patented in 1978 it stayed hidden from the public until 2001. It still remains in Steve Sasson’s possession still.
[Wired]
haha
Instead of showing you the last photo you took, the Nadia Camera displays your photo’s aesthetic rating!
It uses ACQUINE technology, which calculates the play of light, contrast, and other measurements in your photo….! See it in action by clicking on the photo.
Inneresting!
nothing compares to timeless-ness.
This photo by Alex Alexander has a timeless quality about it that I really like. It could have been taken 40 years ago, or just yesterday. (via medformat > anthea-whittle)




