50 genius solutions to various problems, people posted on Reddit community r/RedNeckEngineering. Before we step into the Reddit community r/RedNeckEngineering, I should warn you not to try this at home under any circumstances. Because safety will likely be breached, and the gadgets you’ll see will raise an alarming level of suspicion.
So let’s see what the buzz is all about in this hilarious subreddit with 354k members that has been rolling since 2013. Whether it’s a curse or a blessing, we will find out. All photos are linked and lead to the sources from which they were taken. Please feel free to explore further works of these photographers on their collections or their personal sites.
#1 Invisible Bottom
Image source: u/CharlieMike111
#2 Solo Couch Carry
Image source: u/muchhodl
#3 Soap holder at my friend’s house
Image source: u/muchos-memes
#4 Self feeding fire
Image source: u/Capt_Irk
#5 Found this fork in my brothers house and asked him why he had done it…. then he ran upstairs to grab his IPad
Image source: u/projectolivine
#6 My 12 year old son modified his bike with carpet for barefoot riding
Image source: u/flaglerite
#7 Alarm System
Image source: u/MeliaDanae
#8 I think this qualifies?
Image source: u/Low_Adhesiveness_763
#9 Redneck repurposing of kids’ recreational toys
Image source: u/Cautious-Damage7575
#10 My local elotero putting a shopping cart to good use
Image source: u/elmexiguero
#11 Found on FB, thought it was pretty slick
Image source: u/[deleted]
#12 Need to relocate your switch?
Image source: u/[deleted]
#13 Your move, NASA
Image source: u/may_sun
#14 Spotted this beauty at a Walmart
Image source: u/turbocharged_autism
#15 Outdoor urinal behind home garage
Image source: u/davidb300z
#16 Fixed the downspout
Image source: u/tsmeagain
#17 This man is before his time
Image source: u/bjs1023113
#18 Heavy Duty Office Chair
Image source: u/Dr_Zol_Epstein_III
#19 Almost unnoticeable
Image source: u/unskillfu11
#20 No foundation? No problem….also… WTF?
Image source: u/anthonysny
#21 Im actually impressed
Image source: u/rusty3474
#22 My gas cap stopped closing properly, so I came up with a solution
Image source: u/0311fml
#23 This counts, right?
Image source: u/LinuxUser13301939
#24 Just don’t bring it to the boil
Image source: u/[deleted]
#25 We like redneck engineering so much in Brasil we have a word for it : “Gambiarra”
“GrouPixx is an app that will bring family and friends together for a portrait without everyone being present. You can be in Hawaii and I can be here and GrouPixx will bring us together,” said Florence, creator of GrouPixx. “It is in the final stages of Beta testing. It is Patent Pending by the US PTO office. It will be on both platforms – Android and Apple. It is scheduled to launch the 4th week of January.”
Other features that make GrouPixx different from other photo apps is its ability to choose the background, and the capability to add a special message to the photo utilizing the signature pen.
This is part two of Nicole Pedersen-McKinnon’s ‘boost your finances with photography’ series. You can read part one of How to take photos you could sell, here.
Everyone is an amateur photographer nowadays, thanks to the incredible power of the cameras on our phones.
But there are pictures and there are pictures.
Read more from Nicole Pedersen-McKinnon:
An expertly operated smartphone can get a shot that looks print-worthy – or sale-able. And who isn’t looking for every possible side hustle right now?
Well, I have persuaded the three favourite photographers I have worked with to confide their top tips to making your pictures look professional.
They have generously shared their secrets so you can emulate – and even monetise – them.
Get the composition right
What’s called your photo ‘composition’ is key.
“If you are photographing a person, you could have the person dead in the middle with an even background on each side to almost outline and highlight them,” Instagram and social media specialist Jim Trouse said.
“This is often more effective if they can be bathed in light.”
For other shots, says Jim, the ‘rule of thirds’ can be a great ‘rule of thumb’.
“What you do is position your subject to one side or the other of the middle,” he said.
“Don’t be afraid to use foreground too – most novice photographers forget about this. Whether it’s a portrait or a landscape, use the lines in the vista to lead the eye.”
What are Jim’s specific tips when it comes to landscapes? It’s a similar deal.
“Use the rule of thirds to position your landscape composition too,” he said.
“Say you are taking a coast pic. Either get bulk sky – so two thirds – or, if you have a really good point of interest in the foreground, position the pic two thirds on that. Never split the photo evenly in two, and make sure the horizon is perfectly straight.”
Position your subject to perfection
In what seems a vital tip, another of my favourite photographers also names the ‘rule of thirds‘ right up front.
“My first tip to make any photo look good is to use the rule of thirds and draw the eye to a third of the image,” Nicola Holland, an accomplished wedding, portrait and magazine photographer, said.
Nicola explains that she uses a particular trick.
“If it is a photograph of someone, make sure that their eyes are on one of the lines of the rule of thirds,” she said.
You can see this technique used in two photos Nicola took for my recent book – one for the front cover and one for the back page.
This next tip is also important, and an error I’ve seen many rookies make.
“If you are taking a full-length photo, get people’s feet in it,” she said.
“Otherwise, shoot from the waist up. That’s a big tip – often people crop people’s feet out and it looks like they’ve got no feet!”
And it’s unflattering. Which is not going to make your subject happy or predispose them to let you photograph them again.
Use YOUR feet – and angles
Speaking of feet – use them yourself.
Meg Keene is a photographer who is renowned, in particular, for capturing ‘events’ and candid, action shots.
Accordingly, her advice is: “Remember your client and the story you’re telling and move your feet to tell it.
“I was photographing for the 2022 Women in Media Conference so I was looking for shots that showed the good turnout and an engaging speaker. When Nicole came out from behind the lectern – something no one else had done – I knew I could get a good shot from the back of the auditorium that included the audience, the conference signage, and a good angle on Nicole, all in one.
“There were perfectly good shots to be had from the front row or the far side, but they wouldn’t tell the full story in one shot. So, off I went up those stairs for the 100th time that day. A workout and a banger shot.”
And Meg, your efforts and expertise are greatly appreciated.
Using a phone to fake it
Those three favourite photographers of mine also have tips for how to use a phone to fake it. Firstly, timing is everything.
“For example, if there’s wind blowing, snap the precise moment a subject’s hair and dress are on the same angle,” Jim said.
But, without honed photographic reflexes, years in the making, this can be difficult.
Jim says you will give up a bit of editing functionality but simply putting on the ‘live mode’ on your phone means you will get multiple frames from which to choose – and you’ll never miss the shot.
While Meg says it can be tricky to mimic the old heavy long lens to get dramatic depth of field with an audience shot, she concedes ‘cinematic mode’ works well for portraits.
What apps can you use – if we ask the photographers to speak totally out of school – to cheat and make a phone photo look like the real professional deal?
Nicola likes Lightroom: “You can develop and download pre-sets to make their images really stand out from others.”
“It’s very, very user-friendly.”
Jim is a fan of Hipstamatic, which does a great job of replicating an official single light reflex camera.
“For iPhone, this app shoots authentic-looking analog photographs and has brilliant retro effects.”
Graphic design program Canva also comes highly recommended and allows you to do all kinds of things with your images.
Indeed, Canva is how I stitched together the images for this story.
With massive thanks to our three insiders for their pic insights and phone photography hacks, could you turn a budding photography interest into actual income?
Nicole Pedersen-McKinnon is the author of How to Get Mortgage-Free Like Me, available at www.nicolessmartmoney.com. Follow Nicole on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
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BLUETTI today announced that it has been named a CES® 2023 Innovation Awards Honoree for AC500 solar generator. This year’s CES Innovation Awards program received a record high number of over 2100 submissions. The announcement was made ahead of CES 2023, the world’s most influential technology event, happening Jan. 5-8 in Las Vegas, NV.
The CES Innovation Awards program, owned and produced by the Consumer Technology Association (CTA)®, is an annual competition honoring outstanding design and engineering in 28 consumer technology product categories. Those with the highest rating receive the “Best of Innovation” distinction. An elite panel of industry expert judges, including members of the media, designers, engineers and more, reviewed submissions based on innovation, engineering and functionality, aesthetic and design.
It’s honorable to win the award, which will also inspire us to roll out more innovations to meet the ever-changing power demand in the future. Said James Ray, BLUETTI’s Marketing Director.
BLUETTI is dedicated to optimizing the way people access and store renewable energy. AC500 features a matchless MPPT solar inverter, allowing a 3000W maximum solar input. Recharging it from 0 to 80% SOC by prime sunshine takes about 1.5 hours.
For an AC500+2*B300S combo, dual recharging via AC and solar can achieve up to 8.000W input rate, so 0-100% charging takes as quickly as 1.8~2.3 hours.
The modular design significantly shrinks the overall size and unibody weight of AC500 while increasing the flexibility to carry or replace each module individually instead of everything at once if necessary. Also, you can free up much space by vertically stacking up multiple battery packs.
More importantly, various AC outlets are specifically designed to take care of heavy-duty appliances with ease, including 1 x 120V/30A L14-30, 1 x 120V/30A TT-30, and 1 x 120V/50A NEMA14-50.
Over the past decade, BLUETTI has been motivated to redefine renewable energy while providing a budget-saving solution to go solar for everyone around the world. Those gasoline generators that produce toxic fumes and annoying noise are a thing of the past.
It may be costly in the first place, though, AC500 is a great investment to avoid high electricity bills in the long run. Being a reliable backup power source with a 24/7 UPS function, it can be seamlessly integrated into the main grid to protect from unexpected power failures and realize peak load shifting to effectively reduce power consumption during peak hours.
The CES 2023 Innovation Awards honorees, including product descriptions and photos, can be found at CES.tech/innovation. More will be revealed in January. Many honorees will showcase their winning products in the Innovation Awards Showcase at CES 2023.
Owned and produced by CTA, CES 2023 will take place in Las Vegas on January 5-8, 2023, with Media Days taking place January 3-4, 2023. Attendees will experience new technologies from global brands, hear about the future of technology from thought leaders and collaborate face-to-face with other attendees. The show will highlight how innovations in sustainability, transportation and mobility, digital health, the metaverse and more are addressing the world’s greatest challenges. Audiences will hear from industry experts during live keynotes, including leaders from John Deere and AMD. Visit CES.tech for all CES 2023 updates, registration details and the media page for all press resources.
About BLUETTI
With over 10 years of industry experience, BLUETTI has tried to stay true to a sustainable future through green energy storage solutions for both indoor and outdoor use while delivering an exceptional eco-friendly experience for everyone and the world. BLUETTI is making its presence in 70+ countries and is trusted by millions of customers across the globe. For more information, please visit BLUETTI online at https://www.bluettipower.eu/.
Here are thhe 30 photos of Photoshop fails people shared in this online Reddit group. These days, there are lot of photo editing apps we can install on our mobile and as well as there are free tools available on the internet. But people love to edit their photos on Photoshop and they terribly failed to do in proper way. There is a subreddit called ‘Photoshop Fails‘ that documents hilarious pics photoshopped by people who clearly lack photoshop skills. Check out some of their funniest posts in the gallery below.
Scroll down and enjoy yourself. All photos are linked and lead to the sources from which they were taken. Please feel free to explore further works of these photographers on their collections or their personal sites.
#1 Invisible Bottom
Image source: 18protons
#2 Photoshop Level: 1000!
Image source: hi-man-road
#3 I Have No Words
Image source: magnemist
#4 Photoshop Fail, Unless This Is A Whole New Yoga
Image source: tribelawn
#5 This Mattress Pad Will Protect Your Bed From Giant Disembodied Hands That Pour Old Soda Onto Invisible Flat Surfaces
Image source: Karnakite
#6 Bruh
Image source: mwazz57
#7 Poor Horsie Legs
Image source: cryptic_slays
#8 A Toy For Your Child If Your Child Is Satan
Image source: jessiegay
#9 Seems Legit
Image source: hannahkp10
#10 The Most Magical Pair Of Pants You Ever Did See
Image source: ThEquinox2
#11 Thumb Looks Kinda Sus
Image source: Zhorhersi
#12 Click Bait At The Bottom Of A Legitimate News Article. Totally Real Bridge With Totally Real Cars
Image source: Sydeburnn
#13 Found This Advertising An Article…how Many Hands Does She Have?
Image source: Scarletrouge7
#14 I Spit Out My Drink
Image source: holluu
#15 These Realtors Really Tried Their Best Giving The Tree Some Leaves
Image source: sarazamia
#16 Need I Say More About This Instagram Ad?
Image source: KING__LIGMA
#17 Looking For Face Covers On Amazon
Image source: F21lva
#18 Tmz “Composite” Fail Of Sophie Turner And Jonas New Born
Image source: seanobeano
#19 Haters Will Say Its Photoshop!
Image source: Forgi719
#20 Oh Well
Image source: KKaena
#21 What A Comfortable Looking Totally Real Mask
Image source: devishjack
#22 Legs Of A Alien
Image source: a_fokus
#23 This Cat… Is Wearing Makeup?
Image source: theokcorral
#24 And All The Kittens Clapped For The Graphics Design Skills
Image source: Racingteamsam
#25 “Look At Those Amazing Eyes! They’re Mesmerizing!”
Image source: ThrowPopcornAtMyFace
#26 Hides Your Missing Chin
Image source: impressiver
#27 Wish I Had A Dog As Real As That
Image source: SyphiListerine
#28 Photoshop Fail , After Tunisian Minister Shows Too Much Leg
Image source: azizfcb
#29 Anyone Else Always Swim In Regular Clothes And Shoes?
Framed on the wall of the New York State Museum is an image, hazy blue with age, of the steel beams of the Empire State Building reaching toward the skyline it will soon define. A few feet away, the bare hand of a biologist gently cradling a bald eagle and the outstretched arms of feminist leader and former state representative Bella Abzug are captured in black and white.
With a careful eye and the click of a shutter, color photography pioneer Joel Meyerowitz, photojournalist Diana Marie Henry, “hero of the Hudson River” Joseph Squillante and silent film actor and cinematographer Irving Browning captured the political, social, architectural and natural landscapes of the state, currently on display in the museum’s latest exhibit “Captured Gallery.”
“I consider my photographs to be a visual history,” Henry said. “Photographers write history, too.”
Henry was always drawn to photographing people and exploring how individuals exert control over others. Her photojournalism career began in 1969 in the heat of the anti-war, civil rights and women’s equality movements.
Included in the exhibit are Henry’s images from the New York State’s Women’s Meeting, a prelude to the National Women’s Conference, which she also photographed, held at the Empire State Plaza in 1977. Tens of thousands of women gathered to elect delegates for the national conference, Henry recalled. She captured women discussing the elections in front of a wall covered with sheets of papers with thousands of candidates’ names, a cluster of women in the throes of passionate debate in the middle of the plaza and a Mohawk Nation basket weaver seated among her wares.
“I always tell young (photographers), ‘Don’t ignore the person next to you,’ ” Henry said. “Everyone creates history.”
While Henry recorded the state’s changing sociopolitical landscape, Meyerowitz and Browning captured its urban evolution. Both found their muse in New York City — Meyerowitz in color, which he championed as a respected art form; Browning in the black and white film of his cumbersome, early 20th century camera.
While Browning started in front of the camera as a slapstick actor, even being one of the celebrity faces plastered on war bonds during World War I, he moved behind the camera in 1919 to explore cinematography, directing, avant-garde filmmaking and photography.
Browning’s photos capture the city as it was being recreated, said Ira Meistrich, who rescued and donated Browning’s massive collection of thousands of photographs, film negatives, experiments with color and photo montage and correspondences with Kodak. Browning would lug around his boxy camera to shoot construction workers perched on the rising Empire State Building, the city’s evolving skyline and the impact of the Great Depression.
Yet Browning’s legacy as a photographer went largely unnoticed for decades as Meistrich struggled to get a museum to show Browning’s work.
Meistrich’s father worked for Browning’s film equipment rental and supply company, and when Browning died in 1961, his father bought Browning’s business and came across boxes and boxes of Browning’s photography collection. Browning’s widow told him to throw the photos out, but Meistrich’s father saved them and, almost three decades later, gave them to his son.
While the organizations he contacted applauded Meistrich’s efforts and saw value in Browning’s work, none wanted to take the collection. After 30 years of rejections, Meistrich gave up and scheduled a dumpster. Two days before the collection’s demise, a friend suggested the New York State Museum, which then happily agreed to take Browning’s work. Finally seeing Browning’s photos on display has been tremendously emotional for Meistrich.
“When I first walked into the part of the exhibit that was his work, I started to cry,” he said. “I’ve always felt a responsibility to pass Irving’s work off to the future.”
Bronx-born Squillante found his inspiration beyond the city. While helping renovate a friend’s home in Rhinebeck in the late 1970s, the then-novice photographer spent his breaks shooting the Hudson River.
“I am so glad that I recognized right away that this is a powerful subject,” said Squillante, who has spent the past five decades capturing the length of the Hudson.
He hopes his work will illuminate the importance of the river, which is the highlight of his commute on the Metro North train into the city for his work as a medical photographer.
“I’m like a little kid in the candy store looking out the window at the river,” he said. “And some of these people don’t even know the river is there.”
His photography of the Hudson River has led to collaborations with environmental organizations. A few years ago, he went with John Lipscomb, boat captain for the nonprofit group Riverkeeper, to document General Electric dredging PCBs out of the Champlain Canal. In 2000, Squillante was hired by the state Department of Environmental Conservation to photograph biologists trapping, testing, banding and tracking bald eagles to study and revive the population.
“I didn’t make the decision to actively be an environmental photographer,” Squillante said. “It’s been really nourishing for me, though, to be able to protect our environment through my work.”
“Captured Gallery” is on display through Feb. 27 in the West Gallery at the New York State Museum.
This idea came about while watching my cat’s movements. At that very moment, I thought that he was the reincarnation of Puss-in-Boots. In this gallery of one-of-a-kind portraits, Alexis Reynaud gives a new allure to the timeless, universal beauty of cats.
An otherworldly catwalk: meet a dancer, an imp, and even a movie star. In a velvet case surrounded by light, this feline creature goes beyond its primal instincts and looks at us with scorn.
Reacquaint with your child-like self and experience this spectacle of over forty feline models standing straight on a stage. I give my warm thanks to all the cat owners and breeders, who trusted me in this adventure. Without them and their adorable cats, this series would not have existed.
#1 Chouki
#2 Archi
#3 Loony
#4 Imado
#5 Noody
#6 Nyx
#7 Touma
#8 B-Max
#9 Brutus
#10 Norse
#11 Aubade
#12 Narnia
#13 Blake
#14 Cali
#15 Cacahuete
#16 Neva
#17 Neptune
#18 Judy
#19 Notoriety
#20 Las Vegas
#21 Oprah
#22 Obelix
#23 Tango
#24 Virginia
#25 Coton
#26 Betulla
#27 Gaia
#28 Petzi
#29 Odysseus
#30 Oyana
#31 Thais
#32 Aj
#33 Origami
#34 Tigra
#35 Pele
About Alexis Reynaud
Alexis Reynaud is a Swiss photographer, who became known for his book “Genève, Voyage Urbain”. His work has been shown in Art Basel Selection, Kiaf/11 Seoul, and Scope Basel, as well as in several galleries and art fairs across Paris, Hong Kong, and Zurich.
His photography work showcases, most notably, petrified wood that evokes aerial maps and nude, darkened bodies captured by the elegance that existed in bronze status marked by and frozen in time.
His work has created a path between the visible and the indescribable. It unites these two elements through a dreamlike canvas and challenges us on what we think is real by offering us alternating viewpoints.
Alexis Reynaud’s photography work is part of private and public collections.
You can find Alexis Reynaud on the web:
Copyrights: All the pictures in this post are copyrighted to Alexis Reynaud. Their reproduction, even in part, is forbidden without the explicit approval of the rightful owners.
Indore (Madhya Pradesh): The results of the photography competition jointly organised by Indore Municipal Corporation and Indore Press Club have been declared. The topic was ‘Changing Indore’.
Devendra Malaviya secured the first position, while Kapil Verma got the second and Prafulla Chaurasia bagged the third place. Anand Shivre, Raju Panwar, Ramchandra Ganga, Naveen Maurya, and Deepak Chaurasia Patel have been selected for the special award.
Prize money of Rs 21,000, 11,000, and 5,100 will be given to the first, second, and third position holders respectively; While Rs 3,100 will be awarded to the special award winners.
Mayor Pushyamitra Bhargav and Indore Press Club president Arvind Tiwari said that the participants focused on topics like cleanliness and food habits of Indore, newly developing Indore, art-culture, religion, and modern Indore. In all, 33 photographers had given 165 photos as entries for this competition.
Indore: VHP’s central committee meet in city from tomorrow
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KINGSTON, N.Y. (NEWS10) — The Center for Photography at Woodstock (CPW) will be the recipient of a $1.5 million Restore NY grant that will enable it to begin rehabilitation of its future home. Its new hub, according to a press release, will be the historic Van Slyke & Horton cigar factory.
CPW is a community-based and artist-oriented organization dedicated to illuminating contemporary culture and society through photography, a spokesperson for the center said in a written statement. In late 2021, after 45 years in Woodstock, the nonprofit moved to a small gallery in Kingston.
In its larger city, CPW has begun expanding its exhibitions, programming, workshops, and digital lab services. But this new vision entails occupying more space, hence its bid to purchase the cigar factory.
Constructed in 1907, the four-story, red-brick Van Slyke & Horton building is a 40,000-square-foot industrial space in Kingston’s Midtown Arts District. It has open-floor plans, 12-foot ceilings, and windows on all four sides, with unobstructed views of the Catskills.
In its Kingston home, CPW aims to build a new model for photography and visual art organization that is an anti-museum, anti-gentrification space. CPW will do this by meeting the needs of emerging artistic voices, and by effecting social change through innovative public events, engaging online media, stimulating courses and workshops, and provocative exhibitions and publications, according to the release.
Once renovated, the space at 25 Dederick Street will be used for exhibition galleries, a digital media lab, classrooms, community meeting rooms, staff offices, a film screening theater, and a state-of-the-art collection storage vault.
“The intended uses will create a significant cultural hub in an economically distressed area targeted for revitalization in the City’s Arts and Culture Master Plan,” said Anna Van Lenten, a spokesperson for the center. “The building is located close to Kingston City Hall and the Kingston High School, and one block away from the Empire State Trail and the newly redesigned Broadway-Grand Street intersection, a key part of the City of Kingston’s recent business corridor improvements.”
Here are the 25 hilariously lazy genius people who lead a much easier life than us. Laziness is often the inspiration of the greatest of art and it’s the thing that pushes progress forward. Few examples here are “When you want to listen to music, but are too lazy to hold your phone”, “Who says you can’t surf the Internet lying on the floor?”, “how to operate TV if you loss remote control”, “drinking juice as a new level”, and many more.
Scroll down and enjoy yourself. All photos are linked and lead to the sources from which they were taken. Please feel free to explore further works of these photographers on their collections or their personal sites.
#1 When you want to listen to music, but are too lazy to hold your phone
Source: mralix
#2 “Killing 2 birds with one stone” in practice
Source: feelosophiya
#3 My friend just took lazy to a new level
Source: imgur
#4 Who says you can’t surf the Internet lying on the floor?
Source: cheami
#5 Just in case nature calls in the middle of the night