How to display your old Polaroids

If you're a reader of my blog you'll know that I recently became obsessed with Polaroid photography. I've been keeping them in plastic boxes that I found at the Container Store for $1.50. I'd get them out every once and a while and look through them, but then I though there has to be a better way of displaying my retro images. I headed over to Target and bought two large poster frames and also picked up some photo corners at a local scrap-booking store. Using one of the plexiglass sheets from the frames, I lined up and stuck the Polaroids on it, then laid the other plexiglass sheet on top so the images were sandwiched in between. I did this because I wanted the Polaroids to look like they were floating. The frame fits 42 Polaroids and since I used photo corners, the images are easily swappable.

More Polaroids on IdeaAttic.com








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Franklin Park Conservatory

Yesterday I had a great time with some friends going to the Franklin Park Conservatory, an antique shop & dinner in the Short North. I got some great shots with my Polaroid SX-70 and bought two vintage cameras at the antique store.









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McBess - Wood

23 year-old designer, illustrator and animator Matthieu Bessudo aka McBess produced this awsome music video for the band The Dirty Pirates.

Found on Chunnel
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New Albany Tiny Planets

Some of my favorite stereographic projections made up of 30+ images to create a floating planet.




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Apple's Hyperwall at the 2009 WWDC

At the WWDC (world wide developers conference) on Monday, Apple had a "hyperwall" on display which consisted of twenty 30-inch Apple displays. The screens were loaded with 20,000 of the most popular iPhone apps which would pulsate each time the app was download from the iTunes store via a live feed.

The hyperwall was built using Apples latest technology. It's powered by 20 Mac Pro towers each running the new Mac OS X Snow Lepoard.



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Tiny Planets of the Thomas Farm

A few days ago I posted about "Bobbugatti" that a friend of mine painted in trade for some Tiny Planets of his parents farm. Below are the finished planets each ranging from 27-49 merged images to create the 360ยบ photo. Shot with a Canon 50D & Fisheye Lens. Be sure to click em to see more detail.





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Bugatti Type 57C is beautiful



The Bugatti Type 57C is as rare as it is beautiful, with just 710 built between 1934 and 1940. They’re all highly collectible and frightfully expensive, but this 1936 model is just a little more so because it is the car Ettore Bugatti himself drove.

The car goes on the block during the super-glitzy Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance in August, and auction officials think the final bid could top the record-setting $12.1 million paid last month for a 1957 Ferrari 250 Testa Rossa.

And like that stunning Ferrari, Bugatti’s Bugatti has a rich history.


This particular 57 is standard fare from the factory in Molsheim, France, which is to say it’s beautiful. It features a 3.2-liter straight-eight under that long beautiful bonnet - Ettore loved the straight eight - and a luxuriously appointed interior. The car is unusual for its bright green on black two-tone paint job. Most Bugattis were French racing blue, Ettore being quite the nationalists, you know. Odd, given that he was an Italian ex-pat.

Factory employees built Chassis No. 57335 as a birthday present for Le Patron’s 55th birthday. His son Jean penned the one-off body and it is believed to be among the last of his designs. The car was jealously cherished by the company, which went to great pains to protect the car from the Germans during World War II. After Ettore’s death in 1947, the car returned the factory and was meticulously maintained.

The car has has no more than a few owners since it left the factory for the last time in 1950, and not one of them has changed the car in any significant way. It is entirely original and much the same as when Ettore last drove it. Like that amazing Type 57S Atalante Coupe that was found in a barn and auctioned for $4.53 million in February, this car may be one of the best original-condition Bugattis left on the planet.
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If Apple made a tablet computer it should look like this:

This is the prototype for the CrunchPad.


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Turbo Heather

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Pets in the building

David Thorne was notified by his landlord that he is not allowed to have pets in his apartment. Read the hysterical responses.
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From: David Thorne
Date: Thursday 21 May 2009 10.16am
To: Helen Bailey
Subject: Pets in the building

Dear Helen,

Thankyou for your letter concerning pets in my apartment. I understand that having dogs in the apartment is a violation of the agreement due to the comfort and wellbeing of my neighbours and I am currently soundproofing my apartment with egg cartons as I realise my dogs can cause quite a bit of noise. Especially during feeding time when I release live rabbits.

Regards, David.

From: Helen Bailey
Date: Thursday 21 May 2009 11.18am
To: David Thorne
Subject: Re: Pets in the building

Hello David

I have received your email and wish to remind you that the strata agreement states that no animals are allowed in the building regardless of if your apartment is soundproof. How many dogs do you have at the premises?

Helen

From: David Thorne
Date: Thursday 21 May 2009 1.52pm
To: Helen Bailey
Subject: Re: Re: Pets in the building

Dear Helen,

Currently I only have eight dogs but one is expecting puppies and I am very excited by this. I am hoping for a litter of at least ten as this is the number required to participate in dog sled racing. I have read every Jack London novel in preparation and have constructed my own sled from timber I borrowed from the construction site across the road during the night. I have devised a plan which I feel will ensure me taking first place in the next national dog sled championships. For the first year of the puppies life I intend to say the word mush then chase them violently around the apartment while yelling and hitting saucepan lids together. I have estimated that the soundproofing of my apartment should block out at least sixty percent of the noise and the dogs will learn to associate the word mush with great fear so when I yell it on race day, the panic and released adrenaline will spur them on to being winners. I am so confident of this being a foolproof plan that I intend to sell all my furniture the day before the race and bet the proceeds on coming first place.

Regards, David.

From: Helen Bailey
Date: Friday 22 May 2009 9.43am
To: David Thorne
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Pets in the building

David, I am unsure what to make of your email. Do you have pets in the apartment or not?

Helen

From: David Thorne
Date: Friday 22 May 2009 11.27am
To: Helen Bailey
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Pets in the building

Dear Helen,

No. I have a goldfish but due to the air conditioner in my apartment being stuck on a constant two degrees celcius, the water in its bowl is iced over and he has not moved for a while so I do not think he is capable of disturbing the neighbours. The ducks in the bathroom are not mine. The noise which my neighbours possibly mistook for a dog in the apartment is just the looping tape I have of dogs barking which I play at high volume while I am at work to deter potential burglars from breaking in and stealing my tupperware. I need it to keep food fresh. Once I ate leftover chinese that had been kept in an unsealed container and I experienced complete awareness. The next night I tried eating it again but only experienced chest pains and diarrhoea.

Regards, David.

From: Helen Bailey
Date: Friday 22 May 2009 1.46pm
To: David Thorne
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Pets in the building

Hello David

You cannot play sounds of dogs or any noise at a volume that disturbs others. I am sure you can appreciate that these rules are for the benefit of all residents of the building. Fish are fine. You cannot have ducks in the apartment though. If it was small birds that would be ok.

Helen

From: David Thorne
Date: Friday 22 May 2009 2.18pm
To: Helen Bailey
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Pets in the building

Dear Helen,

They are very small ducks.

Regards, David.

From: Helen Bailey
Date: Friday 22 May 2009 4.06pm
To: David Thorne
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Pets in the building

David, under section 4 of the strata residency agreement it states that you cannot have pets. You agreed to these rules when you signed the forms. These rules are set out to benefit everyone in the building including yourself. Do you have a telephone number I can call you on to discuss?

Helen

From: David Thorne
Date: Friday 22 May 2009 5.02pm
To: Helen Bailey
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Pets in the building

Dear Helen,

The ducks will no doubt be flying south for the winter soon so it will not be an issue. It is probably for the best as they are not getting along very well with my seventeen cats anyway. .

Regards, David.

From: Helen Bailey
Date: Monday 25 May 2009 9.22am
To: David Thorne
Subject: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Pets in the building

David, I am just going to write on the forms that we have investigated and you do not have any pets.

Helen
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Lexus LF-A Roadster Concept Car

Lexus forges into exotic sports car territory with the LF-A concept vehicle. Integrating the simple elegance of the new Lexus design initiative with racing–inspired style. The LF-A Roadster is powered by a high-revving V10 engine capable of over 500 horsepower, which can reach an astonishing top track speed of over 200 mph on the track.





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Polaroid: What's old is new again


I recently developed an obsessions with Polaroid (pun intended). It started out with my friend Jessie bringing one to work last year after she found a OneShot at a thrift store. After a little hunting of my own, I was also able to score one for about $4, however the film is becoming scarce since Polaroid announced last year it will be discontinuing instant film. Film packs are going at around $20 for 10 shots. Which brings up the question, "why even bother?"

Everyone and their mother has a digital camera. People are loosing what it means to be a photographer. It's not about taking a billion shots and hoping a few turn out really well, it's about knowing how to work a camera and not relying on the automatic mode. With Polaroid, you better know what the hell your doing or you'll waste $2 on a crappy shot. I recently acquired a vintage 1970's era SX-70 for the tune of $160. The SX-70 is the holy grail of Polaroids. Not only does it do the instant magic, but it also lets you manual focus on a subject. The Polaroids of the 80s and newer had a fixed focus and had a stupid flash that would go off even when you didn't want it too.

Now I know I could run my digital images through Photoshop and apply a Polaroid action that will look exactly like I scanned in a vintage shot, but it's just not the same emotional affect. There's something about snapping a shot and waiting for it to develop to see if you get an amazing picture, or if you just wasted $2.

"My new (old) SX-70 circa 1970's









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