Looking to get a little more creative with your photography and fancy giving high-speed photography a go? Why not create your very own high-speed camera trigger using an Arduino, piezoelectric sensor ...
The project concentrates on triggering a flash of camera by using sensors such as microphone or laser pointer to produce a high speed photography. There are big benefits that the Arduino ...
YouTuber “Curious Scientist” has published a new project showing how you can use Arduino together with a a few extras to create a macro photography rig enabling you to capture close-up photographs.
What do you get when you cross a photographer with an Arduino hacker? If the cross in question is [nukevoid], you wind up with a clever camera rail that can smoothly move with both shift and rotation ...
Photos of items dropping into water (or other liquids) always have the potential to fascinate — the dramatic splashdown, the explosion of flying droplets frozen in time. They’re also increasingly seen ...
We've looked at various tricks to make time-lapse photography, but an intervalometer that triggers your camera's remote shutter is the real deal—only you don't have to go broke to pay for it.
Hackaday

Arduino Hacks

The graphic above wasn’t painstakingly stitched together by rotating a camera lens on a lazy suzan a tiny bit, taking a picture, and repeating the process fifty times. This is high tech stuff, ...