View allAll Photos Tagged HowTo
Upholstered headboard with 1/2" drilled holes.
Foam, batting, and fabrics should already be attached to the wood Tapestry needle (a long upholstery needle is even better)
Embroidery thread, scissors
Covered Button (see the how to for fabric covered buttons)
Needle nose pliers
Backing button that is larger than 1/2" drilled hole
4. Select and copy the embed code
5. Paste that code into your blog post, web page, or other web-based platform
6. Make sure you give proper attribution by *linking back to the image on Flickr* (Flickr's guidelines require a link back)
Note that this method is only appropriate for your own images and images that have been assigned a Creative Commons license. If an image is assigned an "All Rights Reserved" license, then the owner of that image reserves all rights and the image should not be used. For more on Creative Commons licenses, see www.flickr.com/creativecommons/
Get a cloth damp, place it over the flower on an ironing board, and then press with the iron for 10 seconds at high heat. This will steam the flower flat. You should do this for both sides of the flower.
Lissajous figures are interesting curves that occur in systems where oscillation happens in more than one direction, for example when a pendulum hanging from a string moves in the plane.
These pictures are from an easy persistence of vision approach to playing with Lissajous figures. Read more about this project here.
Thanks to Anda for teaching me how to fuse plastic bags and Federico for coming up with an awesome design.
Full instructions coming out on Friday at makezine.com/podcast
Part 4 of sky , lomics.co/l/70DVQHnohU
Download Lomics:
IOS - m.onelink.me/de143c61
Android - m.onelink.me/5301f4f0
You can make one too by following the simple instructions at allforces.com/2006/04/14/css-signatures/
I was asked to make an Xbox controller Groom's cake for my friend Mikie's wedding reception. Here are the steps it took to make this cake a success.
STEP ONE: I baked two rectangular layers of milk chocolate cake, placed buttercream filling between the layers, and used a stencil I created on my computer to cut the cake into the correct shape.
Press "L" to enlarge Photo.
You will need: drill, short flathead screws and some longer, glue, razor knife, metal L brackets, time, patience, common sense, and a band aid.
The iPhone is a simple, though powerful tool. It's ease of operation often belies the sophisticated mathematical and computer algorithms which undergird it's operations. The integrated movie and still camera is one of the iPhone's highlights, and Apple, Inc. makes every opportunity to improve the images the camera produces.
Quite honestly, the iPhone is perhaps my favorite creative imaging tool... as you may likely attest, if you've been following my photo stream for any time. There are very few things the iPhone can do that my Nikon DSLR cannot. There are a few features on the iPhone which the Nikon does not have, and vice versa. One is the Nikon's ability to create RAW images, whereas the iPhone creates only JPEG images. By the same token, the iPhone has a "Burst" mode, whereas the Nikon does not. And I've been able to obtain images with my iPhone that my Nikon could never get, such as bluebird hatchlings in their nest box.
The diminutive size of the iPhone belies it's strength, and the ubiquitous modern smartphone with integrated camera is now so commonplace that it's difficult - if not impossible - to find a smartphone without an integrated camera feature.
One would imagine that a software-driven camera such as the modern high-dollar DSLR is, would have more features incorporated into it than it does already. And yet, it appears that only Sony has taken such a matter under consideration and incorporated those numerous features into their α (Alpha) series mirrorless DSLR cameras.
Part of the beauty of any smartphone is the practical ease with which it enables or empowers us to communicate - with text, with images, and more.
Some note with a sense of frustration and consternation, that increasingly, smartphone manufacturers do not include operating instructions with their premiere products, and unfortunately, such is also the case with Apple. It's not that such instructions do not exist, but that those details are often hidden.
So while the ease of operations of the iPhone and other smartphone cameras have put photography within reach of almost everyone (remember, that was Kodak's goal with their "Brownie" and "Instamatic" model cameras of years gone by), it remains the case that not everyone knows how to obtain a good image using their smartphone.
And that was precisely the case which inspired me to create this image and to share it with you.
A long-time friend had posted some images which appeared quite blasé, and poorly created. I inquired about the tool he used to create them, to which he replied that he used iPhone, and made the images around dusky dark... the veritable "blue hour" or Twilight Zone.
Since possessing a powerful tool is no guarantee that one knows how to use it, I surmised what he had done, and created this image to assist and improve his efforts. He replied that my supposition was correct, which reinforced my desire to assist him.
Perhaps this may help you, too!