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Super Macro Your Cellphone Camera With A DVD Lens. I’ll admit, Super Macro Your Cell Phone Camera With A DVD Lens is one weird title.

Super Macro Your Cellphone Camera With A DVD Lens

However, if you just moved to a blu ray DVD player and you’re looking for some good use for your old DVD, cnflikt (who also took the shots for this tutorial) came up with a hack to enable you to take super macro shots with your cellphone. Of course you’ll need a camera phone for that. cnflikt uses the notorious, yet old-skooled K800i, but any camera phone will work here. Virtual tours. Fetal Surgery Photo. Claim: Photograph shows a fetus reaching out towards the surgeon during an in-the-womb surgery.

Fetal Surgery Photo

Example:[Collected via e-mail, May 2003] A picture began circulating in November. It should be "The Picture of the Year," or perhaps, "Picture of the Decade. " It won't be.

Photos of eyes

Collections of awesome photos. Historical photos. Other photography pearlers. Nature. Movie Mimic. Golden Gate Bridge San Francisco California -360 degree Panorama, Panoramic Photo. Антрей - LensArt.ru. Creative Photos of Ants. Camera Shooting Modes - How to Understand the Camera Shooting Modes on Your DSLR. Understanding camera shooting modes can make a real difference to the quality of your images.

Camera Shooting Modes - How to Understand the Camera Shooting Modes on Your DSLR

Here is a guide to the five main shooting modes on your DSLR, and an explanation of what each mode does to your camera. To start with, you'll need to locate the dial on the top of your camera, with letters written on it. This dial will always include, at the very minimum, these four letters -- P, A (or AV), S (or TV), and M. There will also be a fifth mode entitled "Auto". Let's look at what these different letters actually mean. 20 Things That Are Way Better In Slow Motion. Split Family Faces.

Cousins: Justine, 29, & Ulric, 29 How much do you and your family members really look alike?

Split Family Faces

Quebec, Canada-based graphic designer and photographer Ulric Collette has created a shockingly cool project where he's exploring the genetic similarities between different members of the same family. By splitting their faces in half and then splicing them together, he creates interesting new people that are sometimes quite normal looking and other times far from it. He calls this series Genetic Portraits. (Did you notice that Ulric, the photographer, is one-half of some of these pairings?

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