scroggins5000
scroggins5000
scroggins5000

Same here. I thought it was a joke.

I've seen them made into ceramics (called bone ceramics). I've also seen them made into pencil lead, but carbon fiber is a new one.

Not sure if serious...

I thought of the exact same thing. Good call.

Since the display on your computer can only show one resolution, these images are resampled to show the difference in quality by size rather than resolution.

Horsetail Falls is one of the coolest of earth's optical illusions in my opinion. I would really love to see it in person one day.

Nope, TX.

It's a flag on the moon.

Netflix: "Nothing to see here... Whats that? Qwixter who?? I don't know what you're talking about."

I would definitely start there, and then move on to sharpening techniques. I prefer the unsharp mask in photoshop as opposed to the smart sharpen, because you have more control. Also, sometimes adding a sharpen filter, then a small blur and then sharpening again, can sometimes lead to good results.

This should work for anything that pushes or is hit by air and easily builds up static. Ceiling fan blades, air vents, tv. screens etc. I'm going to give this a shot.

Pretty nice alternative to freelensing, but definitely not tilt-shift.

Are you a photographer if you just call it a tilt lens?

You can get a second hand prime 50mm f1.8 for well under $100, and get much sharper images in the end.

They talked about the work around, with it recognizing your palms and wrists.

Best reason to have a kid. The toys...

"If your wife doesn't find you handsome, she should at least find you handy!"

This is confusing to many people because what most people call lenses, lensbaby just calls "optics". They call their composing elements "lenses" for some reason. In the picture above, the tilted item on the left is the composer pro ("lensbaby lens"), with the attached edge 80 ("lensbaby optic"). The new optic is what

I was expecting expensive, but not THAT EXPENSIVE!