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But whereas you can print a photo, stick it onto a cupcake, get it made into a sketch for $1, or turn it into a calendar, what’s a body to do with all those 30 second video snippets? Why, turn them into flipbooks, of course! FlipClips takes your short video clips and prints them into little flipbooks. Just go to their site, upload a clip, choose a title and cover design, and $9 and 10 days later, you’ve got yourself a custom-made, full-color flipbook. Sweet! FlipClips.com p.s. For a closer look, check out our jackrabbit-fast 40-second demo video. Published on August 10, 2006 — See more Buy This
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Mix equal parts digital camera, computer, and imagination (you’ve got all three), and you’re on your way. Although flashier computer-generated animation is in vogue, stop-motion has a rich heritage of its own. After all, who doesn’t love the Gumby shorts of the 50s and 60s, Gumby’s comeback in the mid-90s (you know you’ve arrived when you’re a spokescharacter for the Library of Congress!), and the ever-popular Wallace and Gromit? And it’s not limited to claymation, either–Tim Burton used stop-motion and puppets to create The Nightmare Before Christmas, and Comedy Central’s Robot Chicken uses stop-motion with action figures and toy props. You can use just about anything in your stop-motion animation, and thanks to digital cameras and computers, creating one is now super easy.
Photojojo’s Stop-Motion Animation Tutorial
www.photojojo.com/content/tutorials/stop-motion-digital-camera/
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Those ancient works of art took hundreds of hours of painstakingly precise labor. Larger works even employed teams of artisans. You don’t have teams of artisans. But you do have LEGOs. And Photoshop. John Tolva wrote up a tutorial that takes you step-by-step through the process of creating a photo mosaic using LEGO bricks. It’s not gonna turn your studio apartment into a villa, but we think it’ll bring a touch of class to the joint. Also worth a look: Holly Barhamand made a photo mosaic out of beads, the mathematics behind arranging differently shaped tiles can get quite complicated, and Ed Hall LEGO-fied Starry Night. It took several months and ten thousand bricks! John Tolva’s LEGO Photo Mosaic How-to
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You see, we spend most of our time here at Photojojo World Headquarters (a.k.a. Amit’s bedroom) looking for awesome ways for you to show off your photos. As you can imagine, we run into a lot of photo frames. And most photo frames are really, really dull. So when we discovered this sleek and simple photo rope, this non-rectangular, non-photo frame, we were pretty stoked. When we found it was cheap, and used tiny, super-strong magnets to boot (we’re suckers for tiny magnets), we were sold. In fact, we liked it so much, we bought a bunch and put them up for sale. Magnets: miracle cure for backaches, headaches, and achingly boring photo frames. Photojojo’s Magnetic Photo Rope |
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Our pal Josh, shown here holding his imaginary camera, has a nifty trick that will let you fix those shots in a jif. All you need is a copy of Photoshop (almost any version will do) and about five minutes. You can use his technique to improve nearly any photograph where extreme lighting fools your camera into underexposing your image. Watch our quick video to learn how to do it!
Photojojo’s Five Minute Photo Fix
www.photojojo.com/content/tutorials/five-minute-photo-fix/
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But as you grew bigger, the pictures grew smaller. Eventually, words replaced them altogether. If the rise of the graphic novel is any indication, we still like our stories better with pictures. Here’s a fun project that marries our love of words and photography: Go through your photos and find an event with lots of shots (your friends hanging out, a party, a vacation, whatever.) Now pick five photos, give or take, that tell a story when put in sequence. Ideally, it should make sense without any words. Your story may be true or made up, silly or serious. The point is to look at your photos as narrative building blocks. To put a new spin on it, next time you’re out with your camera, consider how the photos you’re shooting would look in sequence. Or start with a plot and take the photos necessary to illustrate it. For inspiration, check out Isuru’s Moon Day Massacre or this story of Homeland Security told using stormtroopers and care bears. Flickr Visual Storytelling Group Published on July 24, 2006 — See more Photo Projects
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Behold, the Blender Pen. It won’t exactly let you cram a backpack into your inkjet, but it’s close enough. Thanks to the miracle of modern science, and powerful-yet-safe-if-used-correctly solvents, all you need for quick-and-dirty photo transfers is a photocopy of your image and a $4 blender pen. A blender pen transfer works great on all kinds of fabrics, tile, paper, wood, copper, linoleum, and a variety of other materials. And it won’t leave that plastic texture that old inkjet transfers sometimes did. Check out the moleskin notebooks, fabric pouches, and quilts people have personalized with this purty pen. Cheap, fun, and easy–our favorite words. How to Make Photo Transfers with Blender Pens p.s. Get your (clear) blender pen at a local art supply store or order it online. (If they sell out, try these guys.) |
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Do you ever look up at the sky, a towering office building, or an expansive landscape and wish your photos could capture everything you can see with your eyes? We do. Our pal Mareen does this neat thing she calls panography. Taking dozens of photos of a scene, she assembles a patchwork of images that more accurately represents what your eyes see when you’re not looking through a viewfinder. Call it super wide-angle panorama or call it panography, we think it’s awesome. Read on to learn how you can make one yourself!
How to Make Panographies
www.photojojo.com/content/tutorials/panographies/ |
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If you’re like most people, during your last trip you either: a) Dashed off a quick “Wish you were here” on a cheesy card you found at the airport, or b) bought a stack of beautiful cards but forgot all about them until you got home, or c) forgot about postcards altogether. Hey, it’s okay. Vacations are stressful. But who says that you can only send postcards when you’re away from home? You’ve got great photos, and it’s a simple task to turn them into postcards. Take our advice: Spend 10 minutes today to scroll through your photos and pick three that make you smile. Print ‘em out, follow our instructions, and send off some beautiful just-thinking-of-you postcards. You’ll make the world a brighter place for a few of your favorite people.
3 Easy Ways to Make Postcards from Your PhotosÂ
www.photojojo.com/content/diy/postcards-from-your-photos/ Published on July 14, 2006 — See more DIY
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Bubblesnaps to the rescue! Just upload a picture, add thought or speech bubbles, and email your creation to friends. They can even respond in kind, triggering a visual meets verbal tete-a-tete. They say a picture is worth a thousand words. But which thousand? With Bubblesnaps, you get to decide! Bubblesnaps Published on July 10, 2006 — See more Websites
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