Here is my version of the soda bottle tripod. It uses just a few cheap pieces of hardware:

  1. a short, course-threaded 1/4 inch bolt with a matching nut
  2. a 20oz or 2L pop top
  3. one rubber grommet or washer


Drill, smash, or chew a hole through the center of the bottle top and thread the bolt through:



Tighten up the nut, make sure the bolt is perpendicular to the bottle top:



Jam on the rubber grommet washer thing, and you're done. Just throw the bottle top in your pocket next time you take your camera out with you. Whenever you need a tripod, screw the bottle top into your camera, screw the bottle top onto any soda bottle you find lying around, and take some steady shots.

omg

Please do not use this photography tip (except on halloween)

WARNING: not recommended for children under 13

http://photojojo.com/content/diy/iphone-as-softbox/

SLRs can seem daunting with all the isos, white balances, apertures, shutter speeds... It is easy to just fall back to the little green "auto" setting on the dial, but you end up wasting your camera's potential (and your dollars, frankly). If you are a newbie to higher end cameras, check out this informative primer on DSLRs at Lifehacker.com.


Shooting with a tripod, but still getting blurry shots? Want to take exposures longer than the maxium exposure setting on your camera? Easy (and cheap).

With a wired handsfree headset made for cell phones you can make your own shutter trigger. I followed this simple instructable using stuff I had horded in a box under my bed.

At a public computer and the only app to edit photos is Paint? Don't fret, just use one of the many free online photo editing apps like Picnik.com, fotoflexer.com, or Adobe's PhotoShop Express. You have to register for PhotoShop Express, but it is a good choice for those familiar with the photoshop layout.

I heard about Scott Bourne's photography critique site scottcritiques.com while listening to the MacBreak Weekly podcast. Bourne is a professional photographer who is offering really good advice on improving your photography all for free. Check it out.

After cleaning one of my aquariums today I noticed two tiny baby guppies. At first I thought "yay!", then I thought "ohh... I hope I didn't suck any up while I was changing the water...". Oh well, no use crying over spilled fish.

I wanted to try to take a few pictures of the new additions. This turned out very difficult; the baby guppies are only a few millimeters thick. I decided to move onto an easier target. A large tetra or swordtail should be easy to take a picture of, right?

It seems aquarium photography is an art unto itself. I took a bunch of pictures that didn't turn out very well. A quick search brought me to wetwebmedia.com, a site with some simple tips for improving your fish pics.

Here are some pre-tip pictures. I'll post some improved photos at a later date (Friday?).


The grey fish is mom. The composition of this photo is really bad. The fish is just kinda floating in the center. I broke the rule of thirds in a bad way here. Plus the orange fish, the bright spots, and the black verticle line distract from the main focus (the grey guppy). Plus the fish is turing away.


This picture is a little better. With a little cropping the composition could be improved and many distractions removed. I like how the shallow depth of field blurs the other fish. The DoF is a little too shallow though; the tail of the front, main fish is out of focus.


This picture isn't terrible. The bright spot is distracting. I could have prevented this by turning off the flash, which I learned is a no-no from the linked web site. Also, the fish's tail is out of focus. With a little cropping and a little burning, I think this could be a nice picture.

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