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Milling cutter bits for my Dremel...

 

© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.

Happy Macro Monday ... theme "Hot or Cold"

 

Dremel grinding away at metal screw ... a whole lot of grinding on this take.

If you are struggling for an idea head for the shed!

 

This is a mini sanding attachment for our Dremel like tool.

Pano -22 x 74 image on 35mm film / Portra 800

home made camera: Nimslo body / Holga lens, f/8 - 1/100

--- as is evident I need to Dremel out more septa and frame,

and I need to consider yet another lens....

Small rotary brush 1-1/2 inch square frame, Spiky bristles turning to buff the metal used in a small drill or Dremel.

Фрагмент армированного отрезного круга для дремеля. Макро в масштабе 1,6:1 с объективом Fujinon-EFC 72 mm f/ 6.0

Here is another of the macro Dremel series at f/2.8 and only 0.6 seconds on the exposure.

This one was at 1 second of exposure and the Dremel spinning in the other direction sending the sparks downwards.

I've always loved carving pumpkins, but it became a more exciting event with the addition of a tool called a dremel. The things I remember best were that it had been a rainy wet October AND that a dremel can spit pumpkin fibers into your face and hair....but it is still lots of fun! Perhaps next year I'll pull out the dremel and a shower cap. ;) HAPPY HALLOWEEN!

For this week’s Macro Mondays ‘Egg’ theme, I have chosen to photograph a cracked egg. Hardboiled and some delicate work with a Dremel was the order of the day! A little paint on the otherwise grey egg box completed the shot.

 

Absolutely nothing complicated about this one: natural light and camera on a tripod. Post processing in Photoshop CC.

For this week's Macro Monday theme "Hot or Cold". Making metal catch on fire.

 

This was one at 2.5 seconds, making a lot of contact there with the Dremel tool and the screw.

Technical specifications:

camera body: eviscerated Nimslo 3D camera. Dremel cut out the aluminum guts and septa along with that plastic sprocket.

lens: single meniscus 60mm from a Holga 120S. f/8 - 1/100

use of 800ASA film or faster.

angle of view: 62 degrees

anterior wall: in order to achieve 60mm I used the lid from a cedar poker card box "Estes Park" Colorado.

viewfinder: standard tele-wide.

film load: 35mm - transport is by manual lever moving two 35mm frames across each image.

image size: 22 x 72mm panoramic.This was actually the first camera I began with, but it was a challenging task with 4 prototypes. I'm still not satisfied and plan on remodeling it.

once I am happy I lock it all together with screws / foam tape and remove the masking tape.

inspiration: John Evan's book 'Adventures with pinhole cameras' - page 58 features a flickr photographer Dirk Fletcher. When I saw his photos and read that he makes his own cameras,,,, well that was it....

total cost: $48.00

A lot of work and an extreme joy !!!!

it's a bit dusty from having been taken to the farm === fun !!!!

photos to follow -------- - - - - - - - - - -

I made a diorama base, recreating time travel scene with the fantastic Delorean car.I took photos of the car using rib led panel, create smoke with cigarette, used a dremel to make spark, gas lighter for fire strips.Hope you enjoy !!!I had a lot of fun doing this job.

Something different for Macro Mondays today. Haven't even looked at my railroad stuff in the last few years, but for putting things "on a coin" you need to get down to a smaller scale.

This is N-scale or 1:160, a model from Wiking, slightly modified - I've took a 0.5mm drill and a Dremel to make the steering-blob to a steering wheel, and drilled real holes in the towbar.

The coin is a Groschen (10 Pfennig) from 1949, Bank Deutscher Länder, later on it was Bundesrepublik Deutschland on our coins.

 

...aaaand the moderation needed 15 hours to realise that the rear of the tractor exceeds the rim of the coin. This image was removed in the middle of the night, so no chance to re-up anything. One hour of work for a kick in the groin. Thank you. not.

 

Toy Project Day 1775

Detail of a trephine. A knife of sorts used by the Inca of Peru for creating holes in the skull for various medical and religious reasons. This one was a souvenir from the 1984 worlds fair in New Orleans. The gold plated object was from the Peruvian booth. The sparks were created with a Dremel tool which could also be used as a trephine in a pinch,

A 5 stacked long exposure with my old Russian Industar 69.

As the pipe was so close to me, I had to stack 5 photos to get enough sharpness plus the Industar 69 doesn't have a thread for filters or Lens Hoods, so I read online about someone using a 46mm lens hood, using a dremel/file to clear the threads so it pushed fit onto the outside of the lens. Nearly worked, but slightly too big so drilled and threaded 3 spare small grub screws to stick out and stop it falling past the lens. And, by luck, my 55mm ND filter thread jammed nicely into the end of the lens hood.

For years and years my pumpkin carving skills were limited to removing entire sections of a pumpkin's eyes and mouth to attain Halloween worthy perfection. Then someone suggested I use a dremel ( a handheld rotary power tool).

 

Sketching out the faces of two surprised pumpkins and our sweet Golden Retriever, Cooper, was a breeze. However, be warned if you choose to remove said decorative areas with a dremel. Pulp will fly everywhere! ;) It was such a memorable experience that I went back to my convention methods the following years.

 

Happy Halloween!

  

One crazy thing, the guy owned the lens adapted the rangefinder coupled ring with a Dremel.

A well-used rotary tool wire wheel that has seen better days.

 

The bristles on a new one radiate out in a bowl shape about ¾" (19.05mm) diameter at its widest point. The combination of high speeds (sometimes above the bit's 15,000-rpm maximum safe speed) and pressure over time will eventually lead to what you see here.

As shot...

 

Please do not use without my explicit permission

© All Rights Reserved

Walter C Snyder

Dremel bits taken with my digitech micropscope

Last Tools on Tabletop Photo

 

Please do not use without my explicit permission

© All Rights Reserved

Walter C Snyder

It's an old grinding stone of my best friend named "Multi Dremel" ;-)

Now, i will throw it in trash. The theme is done and i need space in my garage :-)

HMM!

A gift for my Doctor in the cloudy evening sky

An older model rechargeable battery-powered Dremel rotary tool, ready to make the cut. It can also strip, polish, engrave, sand, or rout with a suitable bit from the selection in the picture, only a small sampling of a wider selection.

 

I photographed this tool six years earlier with a cutoff wheel secured to the mandrel with a screw, a simple but fumble- and breakage-prone configuration. I have since upgraded to the quick-release mandrel and compatible wheels shown here; it's less fiddly with, as a bonus, longer-lasting wheels.

Destroying a perfectly good bolt and trying to burn the house down 😃

 

For Macro Mondays Theme 'Screw'

 

52 in 2023 Challenge

27. Moving

 

a work out on paper and later in wood form by Dremel, thanks have a nice day

A rotary tool with a nylon wheel brush. It measures 1.5" from chuck to this end of the wheel. The copper bracket in the background which I was cleaning is also 1.5 inch high.

I made this by taking a real orange, making a silicone rubber mould and then casting a solid resin copy. I engraved the hole using a Dremel engraver and added laser cut cardboard cogs of varying sizes and shapes. Then another rubber mould is taken and a final casting in white resin. The orange colour is a stain applied with a cloth. The detail inside is painted with wood stain and then gold and silver framers paste is used to highlight the cogs. I made this as a paperweight.

 

Many thanks for all of your inspiring comments!

The granulated moon turban (Lunella granulata) is a popular food source on Okinawa. The hermit crabs are often found using these shells as a protective home. learn more at . www.patreon.com/MakeTheSwitch4Nature.

 

#yadokari #seashell #turboshell #mts4n #millercrabproject #okinawa @lightandmotiondive #sharemydremel @dremel

Sparks of burning steel produced using Dremel style tool and metal cutting disk. Image less than 2" wide. Quite excited to capture so many particle disintegrations. Quite a challenge to create sparks and operate camera in near darkness :)

 

10 seconds, 85mm, f/5.6 (probably). Manual Samyang 85mm on belows extension + picture glass "filter" for protection!

 

Back at last to Macromondays after a break due to unexpected death of my mother - very sad and lots to sort out.

A spinning cut-off wheel in a battery-powered rotary tool. Reinforced wheels are larger in size and are less likely to shatter than a standard wheel.

Macro Mondays theme: Tool

 

Attachments for Dremel tool.

 

Thanks for your recent comments and likes. Have been mostly offline this month. Hope to be back in the groove soon.

 

HMM

if you are still not sick of him! :}

 

Its a shame I never finished his tattoos! I painted all this in one day and then put him aside to be continued the next day and never did, even though I always photograph him! ♥

So, he'll be back in the works soon!

 

He also needs some modifications with Dremel inside his head because the hook slit is very shallow and the hook slips off easily when I move the head, even if both body and head are RingDoll, fortunately its easy to fix. :)

 

Also, I'm craving for a pair of Soom WS jointed hands for him! He needs them more than anything! ㋡

  

The "Craftsman" rotary tool is actually made by Dremel.

 

Sears repair part 2615294309

So here us a figure I did not intend to make. The only reason I made it is because my Dad really wanted me to, as he loved Harley in SS.

 

I left a few thing off on this figure on purpose, like the "Lucky You" and "Rotten" tattoos, as well as the "Property of The Joker" on the back of her jacket.

 

Her hair is painted CMF Baby Sitter hair.

 

Her torso curves were made with a dremel.

 

Her jacket is made from a Lego pirate ship sail.

 

Her legs were modded Custom Bricks fish net legs.

 

Everything else was painted by me.

 

What do you think? For being a figure I did not really want to make, I really like how it came out.

 

Also, thanks to Taylor for editing the pic.

Lightsaber re-charge needed.

 

This is something I've tried a few times, it's straight outta camera no tinkering in Photoshop.

 

The Lightsaber is a regular Lego one, but I drilled a hole all the through it by hand (I tried a dremel but too much friction and I melted a few).

 

I kinda like the rough look to the saber it reminds me of Kylo's.

 

When a human is asked about a particular fire,

she comes close:

then it is too hot,

so she turns her face—

 

and that’s when the forest of her bearable life appears,

always on the other side of the fire. The fire

she’s been asked to tell the story of,

she has to turn from it, so the story you hear

is that of pines and twitching leaves

and how her body is like neither—

 

all the while there is a fire

at her back

which she feels in fine detail,

as if the flame were a dremel

and her back its etching glass.

 

You will not know all about the fire

simply because you asked.

When she speaks of the forest

this is what she is teaching you,

 

you who thought you were her master.

 

~Katie Ford

Dremel metal cutter disk on a piece of steel. The disk is 1 1/8" diam.

Macromondays theme: "Made of metal". As usual, SOOC. HMM!

Macromondays album

Explored photos album

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-[ W is for Wire Wheels ]-

 

A collection of wire brush wheels for cleaning use. The top three are for power drills; the bottom two, for rotary tools such as the well-known Dremel line.

I took my Dremel and fixed the legs on my ILY doll. One down two more to go. She's able to sit up straight.

For your entertainment and consideration on this week's episode of CrAzY TuEsdAy is the heretical FranKenKaMerA where I installed the lens/shutter off my $26.81 No. 1 Pocket Kodak onto the front of a Polaroid Land Camera J66. Why would I do this? After a couple hours of trying to patch holes in the bellows on the recently acquired Kodak, I conceded it was toast. I had the J66 just laying around, figuring someday I'd find a lens to stick on the front of it. The hole was just slightly smaller than the Kodak lens required, so only a little grinding with a Dremel stone was necessary to make it fit. The J66 has detents for landscape and portrait focus each - both were too close to the film plane for the Kodak lens; however, the J66 bellows can be extended further where it locks into place. When set there, and with a piece of 4x5 sheet film stuffed in the back, it just so happens to be set to the hyperlocal distance for the Kodak lens. I've got a sheet of HP5+ in there right now, and I'll give it a go soon. Gonna try a night shot with it.

 

Photo taken by my Sony a7 with a bokeh master Canon 55mm ƒ1.2 lens set wide open on the front.

 

In time, I'll get around to replacing the bellows in the No. 1 Pocket Kodak.

 

Yeah I know, this isn't a pretty picture; but hopefully, very soon, it'll take pretty pictures.

 

Explored July 22, 2020 No. 247.

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