View allAll Photos Tagged Handheld
The new handheld from Panic. It comes with 24 free games released weekly. You can make your own games or load them from other developers. It's cute, adorable, and captures the spirit of 90s handheld gaming with modern design.
Find out more at play.date
I-Massage Plus is our variable speed, handheld massager is perfect for targeting tense, aching muscles.
This is taken from fireworks finnish championship 2008 contests.
Against popular fireworks photography wisdom, I shot this handheld using "fast" 1/10s shutter time.
You can clearly see the larger pipe and the smaller one and the water in between, draining from the grow bed.
Grasshoppers mating taken handheld.
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Shooting fireworks handheld. New years eve 2016, it was windy and cold by the waters near Houston. Family fireworks about to start and since I was traveling lightly, I didn’t have my tripod. Let’s see if I can shoot this handheld. Here are the result. Full Blog: lotophotos.com/fireworks/
The new handheld from Panic. It comes with 24 free games released weekly. You can make your own games or load them from other developers. It's cute, adorable, and captures the spirit of 90s handheld gaming with modern design.
Find out more at play.date
All of these shots are handheld using the fast Fuji X100 and the multi night mode of the Lumix FT3. I decided against the usual tripod and Canon 5DII setup as I was at a private party with a 'half' view of the bridge and Luna Park - so didn't want to miss the party fun, but had one eye on the spectacular pyrotechnics :)
Bell & Howell 35mm Eyemo, c.1925
The Eyemo was patterned on the Filmo 16mm amateur camera introduced by Bell & Howell two years earlier. Initially intended to be used as a news camera, the Eyemo was adopted by Hollywood cameramen, because its portability enabled them to work more freely, incorporating angles not possible when shooting on a tripod.
It became a highly popular professional camera, with various models in continuous production until 1970. Because of its nearly indestructable all-metal body, the Eyemo is still used today as a "crash camera".
[Museum of the Moving Image]
In the Museum of the Moving Image