We’ve got gifts galore: A hyper-intelligent camera that takes photos all on its own, deliciously cool looking lens caps, #jewelry for the Instagram lover in your life and more.
With 7 ALL NEW items, it’s our brand newest gift guide yet!
Plus, we’ve just introduced a new shipping option, that we think your nose is really going to like…
The Autographer is a super intelligent wearable camera with 6 sensors (GPS, compass, accelerometer, thermometer, color sensor and motion detector). It logs your life as you live it. Then uploads the photos and data straight to your iPhone.
In the Shop for $ 399
A juicy burger or delish donut protect your lens from scratches and add a bit of fun to your favorite gear. *Warning* Snack caps are not guaranteed to protect your lenses from being licked. In fact, they just might invite it. Yummy. Yummy.
In the Shop for $ 15
The latest and greatest Instax Mini Camera straight from Japan gives you more creative control than ever before. It has six shooting modes including long and double exposure that no other Instax cam has!
In the Shop for $ 225
The dreamy look that Diana lenses have been bringing to 120mm film is now available for your DSLR. This glass version of the iconic Diana lens gives you all the dreaminess higher contrast.
In the Shop for $ 60
This remote let’s you take photos on your Android or iPhone from up to 30 feet away! Perfect for outstretched-arm free selfies and starting/stopping videos without wiggling your phone.
In the Shop for $ 40
Bring back the family slide show! The Projecteo Gift Box comes with one mini projector and a gift card to order a wheel of slides from your (or a pal’s) very own Instagram pix.
In the Shop for $ 35
You’ve hashtagged all of your photos. What next? Your friends! Give them a laser-cut acrylic #selfie, #nofilter or Like icon necklace.
In the Shop for $ 25
If you love something you pin it, right? So pin your love for Photoshop, Instagram and Pinterest onto your sweater, hat, bag or friend.
In the Shop for $ 12
Tiny gifts starting at $ 6They’ll fit well in your budget and in a sock!
Brother and Sister Bonding Time, by April Joy Gutel.
On Wednesday I spent the afternoon shooting the Oakland Museum of California with my sister April Joy Gutel (her photo of me above, thanks April). I always love shooting in museums and find myself inspired by the art even as I create new art in that sort of a space.
A lot of museums don’t allow photography, but the ones that do almost always disallow backpacks. Because I shoot mostly prime lenses, I need a lot of different lenses wherever I go.
On Wednesday I tried shooting in a museum in my new Scottevest for the first time. It worked great. I was able to pack an iPhone 5s, 4 different lenses (my 8-15 fisheye, 14mm, 24mm, 135mm), an extra battery and two CF cards easily into the vest. This was in addition to the Canon Mark 3 and 50mm lens on my camera. While I definitely felt the weight as I shot (those lenses are heavy), it felt much better than wearing a backpack. The lenses were also much more accessible to me as I didn’t have to take a backpack off to get to them. I simply unzipped the pocket and pulled out what I needed.
Even with this much gear, I still had lots of room to pack more stuff into the vest if I needed it.
The vest has sleeves that come on or off, in case you want to wear it as a jacket. It was very light weight and very comfortable to wear. It’s a great thing to have around for those times when you want more than just your camera, but don’t want to (or can’t) take your whole backpack set up with you.
You can check out photos I’ve taken at the Oakland Museum of California here.
We’ve searched high and low and eye-level too to find six amazing new photo gifts for our friends and fam this holiday season.
Scroll along to see new phonography gear, limited edition Polaroid cameras and more.
Plus, a Sale on some old favorites!
These Photojojo Special Edition SX-70s have been restored to perfection by our friends and Polaroid experts at Mint. This limited run features a Photojojo exclusive colorway. So snatch them up quick for the Polaroid enthusiast in your life.
In the Shop for $ 400
Meet the all new version of our uber popular best-selling cell lens series! We added a mind (and image) bending Super Fisheye Lens and a glare stoppin’ color poppin’ Polarizing Lens.
Starting at $ 15
The Bolt Charger is a high-capacity backup battery for your phone, that’s also a wall charger. The perfect accessory for anyone who’s preferred method of battery depletion is snapping pix of all they see.
In the Shop for $ 60
The perfectly pocketable Phone-o-Chrome slide is an IRL filter that looks just like an old slide. Move its rainbow gradient in front of your lens to add a pop of color to any scene. Pick one up for your most colorful friend.
Starting at $ 15
Everything you need to take better photos with your phone. A lens, a light, a class at Photojojo University and a cool pouch to carry them all. 60 bux worth of gear for a mere 40 smackeroos. Great for phoneography whizzes and newbs alike.
In the Shop for $ 40
The Handleband holds your phone safe and snug on your bike’s handlebars. Take a traffic timelapse, film your commute, then use your maps app for directions! Just the thing for that special bike ridin’ photo lover in your life.
In the Shop for $ 20
Some of our faves, just got favier. Hurry up! These deals are only around for one day.
‘Tis the season for holiday gift guides, including for the mobile photography fanatic in your life. We’ve got gifts for the Instagram enthusiast, serial smartphone documentary photographer and the DSLR-turned-mobile photography convert. See our extensive smartphone photography gift guide on connect.dpreview.com.
Approaching the Holiday season, this video covers some affordably priced DSLR camera models. Entry Level DSLR Holiday Roundup bhpho.to Kelbytraining.com bit.ly Video Rating: 4 / 5
Facebook: facebook.com Our new YouTube channel: youtube.com In this tutorial video we ‘re going to show you why it is necessary to shoot with an ND Filter especially in bright daylight situations. Camera settings: ISO 100 Shutter speed: 50 Aperture: F/1.4 Twitter: twitter.com More DSLR videos on our channel: www.youtube.com Official website: www.fenchel-janisch.com Video Rating: 4 / 5
The clock has ticked over to 25 December here in Melbourne Australia and I wanted to take a moment on a day that means a lot to my family to wish you and yours a peaceful end to the year.
Whether you’re celebrating Christmas, another holiday or are just looking forward to New Years I hope that this time of year is one in which you find rest but also manage to find some time to get out and about with your camera!
Thanks for your readership and support of dPS – without you dPS would be just a shadow of what it is!
For those celebrating Christmas – here’s some of our past tutorials that might come in handy today (some specifically Christmas related while others might help you capture different aspects of the celebrations):
16 Tips for Photographing Christmas
How to Take Beautiful Bokeh Christmas Lights Images
A Christmas Portrait: How I Took It
How to Take Great Group Photos
Holiday Food Images and Thoughts to Go With Them
11 Great Camera Angles for Food Photography
25 Wonderful Christmas Light Painting Images
Winter Photography Projects (for those of you in the Northern Hemisphere)
10 Beach Photography Tips (for those of us in the Southern Hemisphere heading to the beach)
10 Tips to Take Great Family Portraits
How to Photograph a Child’s Party (a lot of these will be relevant for grown up parties too)
8 Tips on Taking Party Photographs
Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.
Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.
Christmas Greetings from dPS [And some Holiday Reading!]
Your stockings are hung, your halls are decked, and it’s time to wrap up all of those presents. But you’ve got a problem. You’re tired of boring old candy cane paper and ribbons.
We’ve got an answer for this holiday head-scratcher, the 35mm film bow!
Get excited to wrap, this DIY will you have your showing off your festive craftiness AND your love of photography at the same time. It’s nothing short of a holiday miracle!
Make Gift Bows Out of 35 mm Film
p.s. Get free 2-Day shipping for U.S. orders over $ 100 in the Photojojo Shop!
Why it’s cool:
Upcycling is everywhere, and this is a crafty, simple, and creative way to take all of those negatives that might otherwise sit in a closet or on a shelf for years and put them to use! Plus, we can’t think of a more impressive way to top of a gift for a photo-loving pal.
Best of all, you might even have everything you need to make them around the house already. Mark our words, film bows are gonna be all the rage this year.
What you’ll need:
Film Negatives
Double Sided Tape
Scissors
STEP 1: Develop
Here’s the best part of this step – you might not even have to do it!
If you already have negatives laying around in a box somewhere, pull ‘em out! If not, you can shoot new ones, or even have blank film developed.
(You can even give your favorite friendly local film developers a call and see if they have any cast offs or abandoned negatives that were never picked up.)
For the project, you’ll need 6 standard sized strips about 6” long each.
Step 2: Stick some shapes
To make each petal you’ll want a strip of double sided tape around 1″ long.
Stick it down ?” from the short edge of your negative strip, remove the backing, then bend the strip over so the edges are even with the tape sandwiched between them. Squeeae it to make sure the adhesive sticks.
Go ahead and keep going at this step until you have five pieces.
Step 3: Spiral stack
Next, you’re making a flower shape with the five petals. One at a time, add a piece of double sided tape near the flat end of a petal, remove the tape’s backing, then stack another piece on top.
Do this until you’re out of petal pieces.
A tip: each petal will need to be less than 90 degrees from the previous one in order for all five to fit evenly.
Step 4: AKA the cherry on top
Now for that last lonely negative strip.
Cut it down to a shorter size, about 5″, then use another strip of double sided tape, but this time make a circle instead of a petal.
Add one last strip of tape to middle of your flower, and press the round piece down on it.
Step 4: Decorate!
Joy to the world, you’re done with your bow! Now’s the time to stick it on a gift, then sit back and enjoy some gingerbread.
Why Stop There?
Make adorable minis with just parts of your negatives.
Use different types of film (like black and white) for different colors of bows.
Wear one on your head as a fascinator.
Use a film bow on a gift wrapped in photo-wrapping paper for a DIY double whammy!
Related posts:
DIY: Make Easy & Fun 35mm Film Stickers! Extra photos for bloggers: 1, 2, 3 Everyone loves stickers,…
How to Make Film Canister Holiday Lights! Extra photos for bloggers: 1, 2, 3 Free shipping on orders over $ 50!…
DIY Photo Wrapping Paper — Wrap Gifts in Your Very Own Photos! Extra photos for bloggers: 1, 2, 3 Free shipping on orders over $ 100!…
It’s twelve drummers drumming time! That’s right, we have come to the end. Welcome to our third and final Holiday Gift Guide of 20Dozen.
We may not have swans a swimming, but we’re pretty sure you’re gonna want to gift your friends our lenses a leaping and our camera bag in a pear tree (minus the tree and the leaps).
OH, and don’t forget, we’ll getcha free priority shipping on orders over $ 50.
USA shipping deadlines: Tues, Dec 18 ~ (FREE) Priority; Tues, Dec 18 ~ UPS Ground
Thurs, Dec 20* ~ UPS 2-Day; Fri, Dec 21* ~ UPS Next Day
Egg Carton Film Case
Bellamy Hunt (aka Japan Camera Hunter) has designed the perfect film roll case for the 35mm enthusiast in your life.
It holds ten rolls of film snug and safe and keeps your film organized for storage and/or travel.
Egg Carton Film Case
$ 20 at the Photojojo Store
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Clip-On Cell Lenses
These li’l lenses slide on and off of your camera phone (or your phoneography loving friend’s phone or just about any phone on the planet) as quick as can be!
You can choose a polarizing filter, fisheye lens, or six-way kaleidoscope or go ahead and snap up all three.
Clip-On Cell Lenses
$ 20 at the Photojojo Store
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You Vision Video Glasses
FREE SHIPPING! You vision glasses are back! We’ve got a brand new version of one of our most popular gifts evar.
These snazzy specs have a super secret little HD camera built into the bridge that records full motion video at the push of a button.
HD You Vision Video Glasses
$ 149 at the Photojojo Store
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The Plaid Camera Satchel
FREE SHIPPING! This dashing bag is great for anyone who loves a day trip (and that’s pretty much everyone, right)?
It lets you lug just enough gear to document your adventures, without wearing out your shoulders. Plus, it’ll match your kilt quite nicely.
The Plaid Camera Satchel
$ 75 at the Photojojo Store
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Instabook + PostalPix
It’s time to get those photos off of your phone … and put ‘em into this delightfully giftable album.
The Instabook comes with a certificate for 10 PostalPix! Order prints right from your phone and they’ll show up at your doorstep, ready to jump into this book.
Instabook + PostalPix
$ 25 at the Photojojo Store
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DSLR Wheel of Filters
It’s a fantastic plastic Holga Lens for your DSLR, with 18 filters built right in.
With just a twist of your wrist switch between fun color and prismatic effects. This lens loves your DSLR as much as you do!
DSLR Wheel of Filters
$ 40 at the Photojojo Store
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Awesome New Goodies in the Shop!
We’ve been filling our shop with giftable goodies all month. In case you missed ‘em…
Add silly accessories to your photos with these neat-o magnets.
Disguise Magnet Set $ 12 in the shop
Charge your camera phone or tablet with the power of the sun.
Bamboo Solar Charger $ 35 in the shop
The Lensbaby Spark makes taking tilt-shift photos easy-peasy.
Lensbaby Spark $ 80 in the shop FREE Shipping in USA
It’s a lens! It’s a mug! It really makes a super-duper gift!
Get Into Focus Lens Mug $ 15 in the shop
Keep your iPhone at the ready for every photo opportunity.
iPhone Wrist Strap $ 35 in the shop
Toy meets camera. Take this lo-fi wonder anywhere for guaranteed fun.
Nanoblock Camera $ 70 in the shop FREE Shipping in USA
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Photojojo’s Holiday Gift Guide 2012, Part 2! It’s the most wonderful time of the year! Some would…
Photojojo’s Holiday Gift Guide 2012, Part 1! When the turkey is roasted and thanks is given, take…
Photojojo’s 2011 Holiday Gift Guide, Part 2! Remember that sleep deprived, sugar high, OMG-it’s-almost-the-Holidays excitement that you…
Last year, we showed you how to one-up those mall elves in the holiday photo game.
This year, we’ll show you how to spin circles around them. Pretty soon those guys are going to be asking *you* for photo tips (and who knows, maybe Santa will hire you as his new photog).
We’re sharing a slew of photo ideas that your family will actually have fun doing! Even the most stoic of teens will crack a smile.
From creative backgrounds to great group photos that take less than 5 minutes to all the holiday lights fun you can imagine, you’re bound to find an idea that’s both creative and a blast.
Those mall elves might have speedy printers, but you have JoJo on your side.
10 Fun & Original Holiday Photo Ideas
p.s. The Super Fantastic Photojojo Lookbook is here. Share with your pals for $ 5 off any order, TODAY ONLY!
1. Multiple Exposures
Because it’s one of the best ways to wow your friends and family with your photo wizadry!
Seriously, though, maybe it’s the way a repeated image mimics the look of snowfall or the way you feel after you eat 10 frosted snowman cookies, but there’s something beautiful, ethereal even, about a multiple exposure.
Some tips: pick a simple subject, like your shiniest ornament, a hand-picked pine cone, a Holly branch or yourself!
Place your subject against a background that’s free of clutter. Check our ideas for fun holiday backgrounds down at #5 (Tinsel! Wrapping paper! Origami snowflakes!) ’cause those work great, too.
To get the same effect as in this photo by Valerie Chiang, you can nab a toy kaleidoscope and hold it in front of your lens. If you’re shooting with an iPhone, the Holga iPhone Lens has a kaleidoscopic filter that’ll do the job.
You can also shoot a multiple exposure photo by snapping the same subject, but moving your camera so that the subject is in a different part of the frame each time you shoot. You can pick however many times you want them to appear.
Get some tips at our Double Exposure Guide or try the (the TIM Holga, which lets you shoot double exposures.
You can also layer your photos in Photoshop or use an app like ImageBlender!
2. Snow Mid-Air!
Since you prefer your snow on the ground or in a sno-cone as opposed to all over you, we found a just as magical snow alternative: COTTON BALLS.
You can make a whimsical snowfall like so:
Plenty of light (flash if necessary).
Quick shutter speed. 1/60th is the slowest you should go. You can also use a higher ISO if you don’t have enough light.
Have your model or a friend throw the cotton into the air.
Snap a bunch of photos in succession, so you catch the cotton snow floating mid-air. Burst-mode is perfect for this!
Confetti or glitter are both another great snow alternative. Here’s a fantab example from Haley Sheffield.
You can even get fancy and turn it into a GIF! Here’s a guide to making a GIF in Photoshop or GIMP. Also, check out our guide to 5 Rad Ways to Play with GIFs.
For phoneographers, try apps like Cinemagram and GIF Shop for iOS or GifBoom for Android.
Pictured: Photojojo Tree Bling!
3. Squish Your Family into an Ornament:
The best part about this idea is that it takes less than 5 minutes!
Grab your family, huddle together as tight as you can (AWWW), and shoot your reflection. You might try shooting from an angle to get your camera out of the shot or simply ‘shop it out.
Now, you’re a Christmas-edition of I Dream of Jeannie, and your cuzzos will be totally impressed!
The photo to the right was shot by Jonathan Arnold on film! Canyoubelieveit? The only Photoshopping he ended up doing was removing the camera from the image. Not bad, eh?
4. Swap Heads
Freak your friends and family out by swapping heads!
They’ll squint until they finally figure out what’s going on. It’s the best!
There are a couple of ways to swap heads. The peeps over at ManBabies specifically swap babies’ heads with dads’ heads. Weird? Yes. LOLMAZING? Yes.
All it takes is a little cut and paste action in Photoshop, GIMP, or any other photo editor. The more precise you are, the more realistic the photo, and the more you’ll trick your friends and family … which is essentially the goal.
You can also simply swap faces, which is what the apps FaceJuggler for iOS and Face Swap for Android do. They detect the faces in a photo, and then switch everyone’s faces onto different bodies.
The result? THIS. Horrifying, hilarious, and endless fun.
5. Get Creative with Backgrounds
You’re so resourceful, you could think of a million and one ways to reinterpret household stuff into rad photo backgrounds. Here’s a list to get you started:
Chalkboard. Use chalkboard paint like Leslie Kerrigan did to the right!
Tinsel. Hang this along a wall for a sparkling background.
Sequins. Just as sparkly, but a little more refined.
Wrapping paper. SO many patterns to choose from.
Paper-craft snowflakes. Make a wall of these!
Foil. Crinkle it to give it texture!
Tree lights. Hang strings of lights vertically to make a wall!
6. Get Ironic
Poking fun at yourself wins because that’s exactly what your family and friends love to do!
Beth’s faux portrait studio Christmas photos bring that ’70s/’80s vibe in the best way possible.
We asked her for tips on how she put this photo together, and she told us she feathered the edges of the photos in Photoshop and combined the two to make one.
Another fantastic resource for studio portrait inspiration: We Have Lasers!!!!
7. Use What You Got, the Christmas Tree Lot
This is a goodie for those of you who don’t have a lot of time to craft a background or pick up extra gear.
Think about using what’s available to you. More likely than not there’s a Christmas tree lot near you with the given that it’s December.
Dress your family up, and wander through the trees for colorful family photos. That’s what Rachel Devine did last year!
Other ideas for locations:
Your neighbor’s yard full of light-up holiday figurines (maybe ask first!).
Your local skating rink.
A snowy grove if you live where it snows.
A fancy hotel lobby! These tend to have just as fancy Christmas trees and decor.
8. Okeh Bokeh
We’d be fools to not take advantage of all the lights that pop up around the holidays!
A classic way to do so is to play with bokeh. Bokeh’s the blurred background you get when you have a shallow depth of field. This looks especially cool when you have lots of tiny lights in your background!
To get the best bokeh possible, aim for a large aperture (which means a low aperture number, like between f/1.4 and f/5.6). A portrait or telephoto lens works best – anything 50mm and up.
Just have your subject stand close to the lens and far away from the background, and BAM, bokeh will be in full effect.
Even cooler, you can make custom-shaped bokeh filters, like Amanda did above. That means the lights in your background can be different shapes — hearts, stars, words, whatevs! If you’re into that idea, you’ll want to check out our DIY Bokeh Kit.
9. Use Holiday Lights as a Light Source
Holiday lights instantly change your photos in these two ways:
Make your photo feel seasonal.
Add a whole new light source, which makes your photo about 10x more interesting.
These two photos (the first by Haley Sheffield) are a couple of ideas for shooting holiday lights both in the daylight and in the dark because, hey, you can do both.
Brad Heaton shot this one inside in a dark room with what looks like some flash on the right to illuminate his subject.
10. Float On
Things get magical around the holidays. So magical, that a baby floating next to a Christmas tree isn’t so far-fetched.
Paul Wallace caught this photo of his kiddo putting a topper on the tree!
Here’s an excellent guide to levitation photos. It may or may not have something to do with digital editing, which means your baby or other floating person will be safe and sound. (No actual levitation required!)
Break Out the ‘Nog, There’s Even More!
When it’s all done and over, chillax with a lens mug full of hot cocoa.
If you’re a spontaneous shooter and always find yourself in low-light, try a Pocket Pod. It stabilizes your camera via your own body weight.
Check out last year’s guide for a bunch more awesome holiday photo ideas!
Stumped on gifts for your fellow photo nerds? Our Lookbook just came out today and it’s FULL of potential photo gifts.
Creepy Santa dot com. Never forget.
Photo credits: 1. Valerie Chiang (Tumblr), 3. Jonathan Arnold, 4. James S. on ManBabies, 5. Leslie Kerrigan, 6. Beth on Flickr, 7. Rachel Devine, 8. Kevin & Amanda & Our Nifty Notebook, 9. Haley Sheffield & Brad Heaton, 10. Paul Wallace
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Photojojo’s Holiday Gift Guide 2012, Part 1! When the turkey is roasted and thanks is given, take…
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