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Archive for the ‘Equipment’ Category

iPhone 7 Plus Camera Test

01 Oct

Don’t have an iPhone 7 Plus? Us either … but, we know someone who does!

We got our friend Danny to snap a few pics and show us the magic that is a double lensed camera. *swoon*

Come along and check out that mega zoom, portrait mode and more.
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KitSplit Giveaway Winners: It’s You!

17 Sep

Well, technically, we have just one grand prize winner: @camdenwalker won $ 200 in gear rental and gizmos!

But, we looooved seeing all your contest entries, and your big photo plans. You had so many great ideas, that we’ve decided to do what we can to turn all these dreams into reality.

We can’t giveaway everything (our accountants said no. boooo) but we can offer discounts! Use the code FALL for 20% off gear rental at KitSplit, and/or use the code DreamBig for $ 10 off any Photojojo order over $ 25.

Now, to really get your creative juices flowing, click on through for ten of our favorite photography ideas entered into the #KitJojoGiveaway.
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Sunset Fog on Mount Tamalpais

15 Sep
Fog flows through the trees below Mount Tamalpais and over the Pacific Ocean

Fog flows through the trees below Mount Tamalpais and over the Pacific Ocean

As part of my effort to field test the new Canon 5D Mark IV I decided to head out to Mount Tamalpais in Marin, California. Low lying fog hugging the coastline made for some very scenic and surreal sunset photos. This is a teaser photo seeing that it was taken with my old 5D Mark II, but rest assured I’ll have more images and opinions to share about the new 5D Mark IV soon enough. Have any questions about the 5D Mark IV or anything you specifically would like to see tested? Let me know.

Photo Details:
Canon 5D Mark II
Canon 50mm f/1.4
ISO 160, 1 min exposure at f/16

The post Sunset Fog on Mount Tamalpais appeared first on JMG-Galleries – Landscape, Nature & Travel Photography.


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KitSplit: Shoot with Super Fancy Gear for Very Little Moola

12 Sep

We’re ‘bout to get you all geared up for photo-snapping funmazement.

We’ve teamed up with KitSplit for a great giveaway! (We’re kinda mad we can’t win ourselves).

Win $ 100 in Photojojo gizmos and $ 100 in gear rental from KitSplit.

What’s a KitSplit? We’re glad you asked. Read along for complete giveaway rules and a formal introduction to our pals, the KitSplitters.

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Win One Hundo Photojojo Bux

26 Aug

Everyone knows that our warehouse has a tiny dino infestation problem.

It’s adorable.

Those little critters have a habit of crawling into boxes before we ship them out and we love to see where they end up.

This week, post a photo of your #photojojodino and we’ll pick our favorite to win a $ 100 Photojojo Gift Card and three $ 50 runners-up. Winner’s chosen 8/31.

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Winter Morning at Swinging Bridge, Yosemite National Park

26 Aug
Morning light on Yosemite Falls amidst rising winter fog - Yosemite National Park

Morning light on Yosemite Falls amidst rising winter fog – Yosemite National Park

To celebrate today’s 100th birthday of the U.S. National Park system I thought it would be fitting to share a favorite image of mine taken in Yosemite National Park “Winter Morning at Swinging Bridge”. The NPS is often considered America’s Best Idea and I think most would agree. I have made so many amazing memories in our National Parks and witnessed jaw dropping beauty that has warmed my soul. We are all so fortunate to have this great resource.  Now get out there and explore it.

The post Winter Morning at Swinging Bridge, Yosemite National Park appeared first on JMG-Galleries – Landscape, Nature & Travel Photography.


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Make Super Simple DIY Photo Coasters

18 Aug

Get your photos off of your phone and under a drink!

Turn your photos into Photo Coasters to show off your photography skills, crafting skills and ring-free coffee table.

These coasters are simple to make, fully functional, totally waterproof and super-dee-duper gifty.

Plus, they’re a heck of a lot safer than setting a hot coffee mug on your phone.

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New in the Shop: The I-1 Instant Camera

29 Jul

Woah.m.g. They did it.

After restoring an old Polaroid factory and bringing back instant film for Polaroid cameras … Impossible Project has made the first new camera for the original instant format in 20 years!

All the good ol’ fun of old Polaroid cams, with new creative features like double exposures, light painting mode, full manual control and more.

LEARN MORE or BUY


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We’re Giving Away a Photo Drone!

21 Jul

It’s time to take your photography to new heights, cuz we’re giving away a drone!

Yup, a Phantom 2 Vision+ Drone with a built-in 14MP, HD, wide-angle camera.

We’ve got five ways to enter. So, enter! Five times.

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Photographers to Get (Small) Reward for Their Creative Commons Images

19 Jul

dotspin

Image courtesy: Dotspin

Someone is benefitting from your Creative Commons-licensed images, and it probably isn’t you. Sure, you might get a little thrill out of knowing that you’re helping a designer with a small budget (or a blogger with no budget) to use an attractive image. And if you’re able to see your pictures in use, the validation can be a fun boost. But that’s a big ‘if’ and it’s pretty much where the benefits end. One new company, though, believes that photographers willing to give away their pictures should receive more for their efforts. Dotspin is trying to line up gifts for photographers who apply Creative Commons licenses to their pictures and give them away on social media sites.

The company has been online since the beginning of May and is still in beta. Its aim, says co-founder Gastón Paladini, is to reward photographers for their contributions to the Internet.

“The idea come from a vision to have a more fair web for all. We think that social media users should be recognized for good content (photos) shared and to be protected in a legal way (copyrights).”

Dotspin is connected to both Instagram and Twitter. Having signed in using an account on either one of those services, Dotspin’s users can take a picture, apply their filters and upload it to their account, tagging the image with the hashtag #dotspin.

The hashtag ensures that the photo is also submitted to Dotspin where, by default, it is licensed as Creative Commons. A settings page, however, allows photographers to change the type of license applied. Rather than selecting one of the various Creative Commons licenses in use, they’re asked whether they’re willing to allow modifications and commercial usage in addition to personal use.

The image will appear in Dotspin’s galleries watermarked with a colored dot, but not before the community has voted on it. Users are presented with two random pictures and asked which they prefer. Images that receive a large number of votes receive “dotcredits,” points which they can redeem for rewards.

At the moment those rewards come from Dotspin, based on “some agreements with Amazon.”

“But we think that soon the suppliers and brands will come to us to offer their products on the Dotspin catalogue,” says Gastón.

Put Your Ads in Front of… Picture-Takers

He may be right.  Instagram currently has more than 100 million users, offering a massive potential market for sellers looking to promote their goods. It’s likely that Dotspin will be able to find some companies who are willing to offer vouchers or freebies in the hope of turning the winners, as well as the site’s users, into future customers.

But the site will face a number of challenges too.

The first is the lack of demographic data. Awarding points that users can redeem means that suppliers can’t target their advertising. They’ll have to settle for offering their products to a demographic made up of roughly of people who like taking pictures. That’s a broad category.

The voting system, too, leaves much to be desired. At the moment, two images are placed against each other at random, forcing users to choose between a picturesque sunset and a mirror-shot selfie, for example. A voting system that pitched two images showing similar topics or that were shot in similar styles against each other might be a more serious way of judging talent.

But a bigger problem is the site’s goal itself. Gastón’s aim to reward people willing to give away their images may be fair and reasonable, but the lack of rewards on offer so far hasn’t stopped people from sharing their pictures. Flickr alone has more than a quarter of a billion photos available under one form of Creative Commons license or another. Donors of those images have made them available with no hope of reward. Gastón wouldn’t say how many photographers have signed up since the site’s beta launch but he did indicate that the numbers are “much more than we thought.”

That could be a good sign but it will be interesting to see whether Dotspin is able to capture a good chunk of the photographers willing to allow people to use their images.

Creative Commons Users Want Tracking for Their Photos, Not Thanks

The most likely outcome is that some photographers currently sharing their images through Instagram and Twitter will sign up to Dotspin and start adding the hashtag. They’ll enjoy the extra feedback provided by the voting system, especially if it’s enhanced. And if the site is able to bring in donors, they might feel a rush if they’re able to win enough credits to pick up a free app download or a discount from a printing service.

But none of those rewards is likely to have an impact on photo-sharing as a whole. They aren’t likely to encourage it and the odd prize isn’t going to come close to rewarding photographers for giving away for free an asset that costs other photographers a great deal to produce.

That’s because when photographers add a Creative Commons license they aren’t doing it for the reward. They’re doing it because they want people to use their images — even the images that few people are ever likely to use. And most of all they want to see their pictures in use.

That would have been a much more powerful reward than goodies redeemable against voted credits. If a platform were produced that highlighted the best of the most recent Creative Commons-licensed images, helped publishers, bloggers and editors to find them, and informed the photographers each time an image was downloaded and told them where it was going to be used, that would be much more rewarding.

And if that service also gave the photographers a share of the page’s revenues, then photographers who applied Creative Commons licenses to their images would really start to feel the benefits.


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