DIY R-Strap

Saturday, October 11th, 2008

My DIY R-Strap

I got the idea to make this great should strap for my camera From PhotoDojo. In essence it is a strap that hangs across your chest that lets your camera hang at your waist allowing you to grab the camera and bring it to your face for quick shots, but also be out of your way when not in use.

I made this strap from 2 straps. I had one wider strap from a free laptop bag I got when I ordered my MacBook pro, and the thinner strap is from an old, and I mean old, camera bag.

The laptop bag strap had great hardware and shoulder pad. I cut off the hardware which was a swivel clip and that allowed me to remove the shoulder pad. The swivel hook’s part that attached to the original strap was wider than the new one which will allow it to slide.

I took the thinner strap, put on the shoulder pad, slid on the clip hook and made the thinner strap one piece with a plastic slip hook. Afterward, I put an eyelet hook on the bottom of my camera in the tripod mount socket. It is a little long, but it works.

Now my camera can hang at my waist and I can pull it up to take a shot without the whole strap moving. You can see an example of how it works here . If you want to order the original you can do so at that link too.

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Tips for Shooting RAW only

Saturday, September 27th, 2008

Many of us on Friends In Tech are keen photographers and therefore have decent cameras that are capable of shooting in Raw and JPEG mode and a lot of the cameras are capable of shooting both at the same time.  This has an advantage in that you don’t really need specialized software to edit the JPEG files and the Raw photos are still available for the heavy duty editing that may be required.

However shooting both Raw and JPEG files in the camera slows the writing of files to the media card and also takes up extra space. In my Canon XT camera the jpg files take up an extra 25% of the media space.

By switching to Raw only, you will always have the benefits of the full original file and detail to work from but it makes it harder for quick edits if you need the JPEG formats.

From a hint on Photoshop Insider by Scott Kelby comes a link to the free (registration and email address required) RawWorkFlow.com’s Instant JPEG From Raw utility. The Photoshop Insider link also has some interesting history on the Raw format and a video on how to use Instant Jpeg from Raw too.

Note that the application does not register itself in the start menu or on the desktop – you just select your Raw files, right click and choose the Instant JPEG from Raw menu option.

Try it and let us know what you think.

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Review – Eye-Fi Wireless SD card for Cameras

Monday, May 26th, 2008

Victor Cajiao and George Starcher review the Eye-Fi SD Card. The Eye-Fi is a 802.11G wireless memory card. It lets you upload your photos to your computer and even sharing sites like Flickr straight from your camera as you take photos.

Eye-Fi

Links Mentioned:

  • Eye-Fi
  • Eye-Fi on Flickr
  • ATP Photo Finder – GPS Tagger
  •  
    icon for podpress  Eye-Fi Review [30:05m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
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    Flickr Guest Pass

    Thursday, January 3rd, 2008

    I didn’t know about this feature either. Flickr Guest Pass:

    You can share public photos in your photostream by copying the URL in your browser’s address bar and pasting it an email. Anyone can see your public photos anytime, whether they’re a Flickr member or not.

    But! If you want to share private photos with people, use a Guest Pass. You can grant anyone access to the entire contents of one of your sets, including any private photos it contains. A Guest Pass is actually just that URL. This means that whoever sees that URL can access the set and all the photos inside it.

    Go to the set you want to share and click the “Share this set” button. Then we’ll help you either send an email to friends via Flickr or make a special web address (URL) that you can share.

    You can then expire the pass whenever you want to. I had no idea until I saw it on Daring Fireball tonight. I could see myself using it.

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    2007 – The Year in Pictures

    Thursday, December 27th, 2007

    You may or may not be aware, but many FiT members are also photography buffs. As a result, we each put together individual “Best of 2007″ slide shows. These are photographs that were personal favorites of each photographer. We hope you enjoy them.

    Kevin Devin’s Best of 2007
    Douglas E. Welch’s Best of 2007
    Mike McBride’s Best of 2007
    Andy Helsby’s Best of 2007
    Kreg Steppe’s Best of 2007
    Victor Cajiao’s Best of 2007
    Larry Pesce’s Best of 2007
    George Starcher’s Best of 2007

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    Rounded corners for your images

    Wednesday, November 28th, 2007

    RoundPicCourtesy of Jane’s E-Learning Picks, RoundPic is a nifty online tool that can quickly round the corners of images that you can either upload or point to an existing image already online. Once you have your image uploaded, you can then resize it, adjust the radius of the corners, and finally, download the final product.

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