View allAll Photos Tagged diffuser
this is a picture of a home-made flash bracket that can clamp onto doors, furniture, pipes, etc. (bracket from off old fan w/ old ball-head & Nikon flash-foot adapter.
also demo of "honey jar diffuser".
Instant noodles case flash diffuser
cf :
www.flickr.com/photos/workshop/15798148949/
If you are reading this I would like you to take a few minutes to flick through my recent uploads and celebrate the life of my beloved Ricoh gx100. The camera didn't meet its demise (blunt force trauma) on this exact set but it was this same day, the smash occurred on Lanikai beach about 2 hours later during sunset.
I've always been one to get emotionally attached to inanimate objects, I'll admit it... A pair of worn out comfy shoes? Check. Ratty t shirt.. sure. My gx100 was certainly up there with the best of them.
I will probably move to Canon now, for the CHDK features but KAPing is never easier and more convenient with a camera that has a built in menu for selecting the amount of seconds for a continuous timer (intervalometer). Ricoh gx100, you were light, simple, convenient and never gave me any grief. Thank you.
I'm sorry to see you go, especially because of my own error. I saw the levitation delta kite acting funny, tilting/leaning to the side and yet I let out more line hoping to connect with stable wind higher up. Korea, Malaysia, Wisconsin, Hawaii, we had some good times together. If you had to go out at all, I think you went out at your top. So far these are the best pictures I think you've produced for me.
Well, time to go to work so I'll leave it at that. I'll add proper titles to the pictures asap.
*Taken from a camera suspended from a kite line in Waimanalo, Oahu.*
For photography collective Diffuse we made this massive 80 pages Riso printed zine.
Diffuse Collective consists of 9 photographers from Europe and the United states and gives a perspective on the weird things occurring during “normal” day to day situations.
After all the photographers send in a selection of their work we transformed it in to a hand-bound (side sewn stitch) Risograph printed zine. The zine is 28,5 x 20,0 cm (11,2” x 7,9”), consists of 64 Black & White and 16 colour pages (faux CMYK) and is made in an edition of 100 copies.
More info at
Then I stuck the duffuser on the flash and tried to do everything the same--no setting were touched. Yeah, I know the background is dark, but it's brighter than the ceiling bounce shot and there were no lights on in the entry which is like a little hallway. It aint art, but I got decent light where it looks okay. There is diffused light defining my face and even my shirt looks ok, and there is some light on the background. Imagine what I could do with some tweaking.
Taking scrapbooking paper and embellishments you can make your plain glass reed diffuser into a decorative Christmas item for your home or a gift
So after going to starbucks for a quick coffee i decided to make the cup into a 360 diffuser using some cardboard to go round the flash and some black tape to attach the cup too, i would like to re create it with a plain white cup that hasent been used for coffee!
Please check out my facebook page for more uploads :)
Checking the workings of the Burnett Diffuser at Fairymead Sugar Mill, Bundaberg. This diffuser was relocated in 1982 to the southern side of the mill. Scanned from a publication (1969) by CSR Limited on behalf of the Australian Sugar Industry.
Gen 1 DIY Diffusers for my MT-24EX. Posted a lousy mobile phone shot of it before but this one was taken with an SLR.
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Have you ever been some place and in desperate need of a diffuser for your on-camera flash?
You've heard about using a biz card but you've got nothing to hold it in place?
Well here's my mod, which occured to me in just such a situation.
I used to do origami as a kid, spent hours folding paper over and over and... where was I?
Yes! The diffuser. Well you've probably folded an aeroplane using this method so I used it to fold my biz card and slip it into the gap that exists on my 400D built-in flash.
Method:
1. Fold each corner fully across the card
2. Colapse togther to form triangular peak
3. fold the 'ears' up to form a small square