

David Matthew Mooney has updated the project titled The Learner's Heliostat.Voja Antonic wrote a reply on BADGE FOR 2020+₮ SUPERCON (₮=years of lockdown).Daniel Scott Matthews on ERRF 22: Building A Library Of Filament Colors.echodelta on Retrotechtacular: The Original Weather Channel.rpavlik on Crusty Leaking Cells Kill Your Tech.Gregg Eshelman on Render Yourself Invisible To AI With This Adversarial Sweater Of Doom.Mike Vars on Analog Tank Driving Simulator Patrols A Tiny Physical Landscape.The Commenter Formerly Known As Ren on Analog Tank Driving Simulator Patrols A Tiny Physical Landscape.Al on Render Yourself Invisible To AI With This Adversarial Sweater Of Doom.Cliff Grable on Retrotechtacular: The Original Weather Channel.JMC on Render Yourself Invisible To AI With This Adversarial Sweater Of Doom.Joshua on Crusty Leaking Cells Kill Your Tech.Teardown: Cooler Max Liquid Cooling System 56 Comments Posted in Misc Hacks Tagged camera, photography, slide digitizer, slide projector, slides Post navigation If you’ve got a smaller collection to digitize, you might find this simple 3D-printed adapter to be useful, too! Overall, it’s a straightforward build that automatically imaged over 40 boxes of slides for without issue. It keeps count as the slides go by, so it stops when the entire carousel has been imaged.

The Arduino is also charged with telling the carousel system to advance to the next slide as required. The camera is set up with a zoom lens and relies on auto-focus to get crisp, clear images of the slides. An Arduino Nano is used to command a camera to take photos, via a hacked-up shutter release remote. It’s fitted with LED strips instead of the original light source, which are used to illuminate the slides themselves. The digitizizer is based on a Kodak carousel slide projector. An automatic digitizer can make quick work of your collection, and this build from will do just that. Slides make for great old-timey fun, but it’s awesome to have a digital backup of your old photos, too.
