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When a loud sound occurs, the Arduino triggers the flash. Simple enough, but the resulting pictures are amazing. It also looks like a lot of fun to destroy perfectly good things in the name of art.
Since [Jordan’s] camera only has a single pixel, he has to move it around and take each reading one at a time. To accomplish this, the Arduino is hooked up to two servo motors.
In the realm of DIY electronics, the Arduino UNO has emerged as a versatile platform for a myriad of projects. One such innovative project is the creation of a low-cost thermal camera, as ...
Photographers looking for an affordable motorised camera slider, may be interested in a new Arduino project which uses a stepper motor combined ...
This project uses a Raspberry Pi 2 or 3, an Arduino Uno, some servos, and a USB webcam. The end result is a camera mounted to the servo that’s controlled by the Arduino.
Kevin Kadooka is the engineering student whose homemade TLR polaroid became a successful Kickstarter. Now Kadooka is back to his old tricks, with a new project that he’s dubbed the Lux. A 120 film ...
SEE what happens when you take a Gameboy, camera, thermal printer, Arduino board and gun. The results are nostalgically awesome. Dmirtry Morozov has created the world’s most unnecessary, yet ...
One for photography enthusiasts. How about some DIY image processing for your high-end DSLR camera? Call it image stabilisation, or de-blurring, or just image processing, but the Arduino-based add-on ...
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