Audrey Penven Reveals The Hidden Beauty of Microsoft’s Kinect
This makes me want to go move my couch out of the way and get some Dance Central on.
Audrey Penven Reveals The Hidden Beauty of Microsoft’s Kinect
This makes me want to go move my couch out of the way and get some Dance Central on.
I think I may have just stumbled on my next DIY project/what to do with the camera cache sitting in my basement…
DIY vintage Polaroid camera lamps will up the sophistication factor of your apartment x10!
I’d never bothered to get into Polaroid transfers (despite that being my reasoning behind investing in a Land 360 in the first place), as I’d read a slide printer was necessary. And after investing in a camera and some (at the time) soon-to-be discontinued film, it sounded way more expensive than I’d originally anticipated. So I stuck to emulsion lifts, which had originally seemed like more trouble to me.
But my last post got me thinking that it was about time I took another look at image transfers. A bit of investigative journalism later, and I came across this hybrid process. It makes the whole thing seem much more accessible than the sites/instructions I’d found before. I know what I’ll be doing this weekend!
But alas, for now at least, it’s only a concept. In the meantime, having never gotten a slide printer or anything of the sort, I’ll just stick to emulsion lifts.
[Thanks, susanolivia, for the link!]

The ones that got away. The photos missed when you couldn’t get to your camera fast enough or when you simply forgot your camera at home.
Unphotographable is where photos not-taken live.