ambergray:

Photojojo - Polaroid Picture Frames
I want lots and lots of these…

ambergray:

Photojojo - Polaroid Picture Frames

I want lots and lots of these…

ambergray Via shh.
ashcampbell:

I WANT THIS SO BAD.
definitely asking for this for Christmas.I think everything on my list will be photo-related, ha.

ashcampbell:

I WANT THIS SO BAD.

definitely asking for this for Christmas.
I think everything on my list will be photo-related, ha.

This adapter lets you put classic Diana lenses on your Nikon or Canon DSLR!
Comes with adapter and a rad Diana wide-angle lens
Photojojo - The Dreamy Diana Lens

This adapter lets you put classic Diana lenses on your Nikon or Canon DSLR!

Comes with adapter and a rad Diana wide-angle lens

Photojojo - The Dreamy Diana Lens

A pocketable camera for an SLR nerd

marco:

I used to carry my SLR and laptop with me in my huge backpack every day, but a few changes have resulted in almost never bringing my camera day-to-day anymore:

  • My commute is now on the subway, which is much more crowded and much less practical for backpack-wearing. I have a great messenger bag that works much better for the subway, but it can’t comfortably hold more than a few pounds. (Heavy messenger bags are awful for your lower back.)
  • I never need to bring a laptop to work anymore, as I have a desktop there, and I can no longer use a laptop during the commute.
  • It’s often easiest not to bring a bag at all, especially when wearing a jacket.
  • Through lens and body upgrades, my SLR gear has grown larger and heavier. I love having it when I want to take high-quality photos, but I’ve missed a lot of shots because I didn’t have my insanely great camera with me.

I’ve started considering getting a second, inexpensive camera that’s small and light enough that I could keep it in a jacket pocket or a small bag without much of a weight cost.

Compact cameras and I don’t usually get along because we have very different priorities: I like optical and technical perfection with available manual controls, and don’t care much for most consumer-oriented features (like face detection, lots of “scene” modes, huge zoom ranges at the expense of optical quality, and insanely high pixel densities at the expense of noise). Compact cameras are almost always designed for the opposite type of consumer that I am because there are a lot more of them.

Compact cameras targeted at people like me do exist: Gruber’s favorites, the Ricoh GR Digital series, are great examples. But they’re limited, expensive, and rare.

Then there’s the iPhone dilemma: I already have an iPhone 3GS, which contains a passable camera for many situations. It’s a huge improvement over the fixed-focus iPhone 3G camera, but it’s nowhere near the optical quality and versatility of a lens and sensor larger than the tip of a ballpoint pen. But it’s always with me, always charged, and much more versatile in software and on-the-go actions. It’s therefore much more difficult to justify a standalone compact camera to sit between the iPhone and the 5D Mark II, especially since most of them wouldn’t satisfy my needs very well anyway.

But today, Nora tipped me off to the relatively new Canon S90.

Let’s see: small size, great image quality, RAW shooting, manual controls, not too expensive.

We may have a winner.

I need to play with one of these in person. Then I need to convince Tiff to let me jump over the iPhone dilemma.

Or maybe I just need to suck it up and carry a moderately heavy bag every day again.

Marco, the S90 is all that.

If you want, I’ll show you mine when I’m in town in a week.

marco Via Marco.org

When you’re twisting balloons for children, never tell them what you’re making. The majority of the finished products—despite your best attempts—almost always look like a dog, a blastula, or something vaguely phallic. If you identify what you’re actually attempting to make, the children will respond to your finished product with, “That doesn’t look like a [insert animal name]…”

But if you make the animals and then ask, “What does it look like to you?” the child’s imagination will take over, turning the blue, four-legged balloon into Blue from Blue’s Clues, the blastula into a Pokemon, and the phallic object into an elephant.

You’ll also get bonus points because you were so cool for making exactly what they wanted.

Photojojo’s Bottle Cap Tripods were on The Today Show today! (With Kathy Lee!)

So my daughter wants a mobile phone

bijan:

This morning, like most Fridays, I take my daughters to breakfast before school (the boy hangs at home with mom. No preschool on Fridays)

My oldest is now 10. And these days she is selling me hard on why she wants a phone.

This morning was no different.

I’m not ready to give her one yet. And i gave her my reasons.

Then she asked “dad, when did you get your first phone?”

I replied, “I didn’t get one until I was 22”

She laughed “hey, tell me the truth!”

I say “I am. Really”

She pipes back “I’m gonna ask grandma when she first bought you a phone”

I then say “look, Sophia, they didn’t even have cell phones when I was your age”

Her reply - “no way”

WIN THIS CAMERA!
Photojojo’s giving away three Nikon DSLRs this week, and we roped in our friends at Make, Craft, and CrunchGear. So there’s tons of ways to win.
Details here: Photojojo Blog  » Win Nikon DSLRs All This Week

WIN THIS CAMERA!

Photojojo’s giving away three Nikon DSLRs this week, and we roped in our friends at Make, Craft, and CrunchGear. So there’s tons of ways to win.

Details here: Photojojo Blog  » Win Nikon DSLRs All This Week

OMG. I wish I still had my PowerBook. Looking on eBay…
Grackle68k - Twitter Application for Classic Macintoshes

OMG. I wish I still had my PowerBook. Looking on eBay…

Grackle68k - Twitter Application for Classic Macintoshes