Eomi The Pope Deserved a Better Leaving Gift Than This Comic Sans Photo Album
$60 for a bent piece of stainless steel it may be, but DSLR shooters will go crazy
stanley bottle for this. It lets you control various focal subjec
stanley cup ts, by setting and remembering their focal points using just a few markers. Watch the video above to see some examples of Aric
stanley cup Spence Follow Focus design, and if you like what you see, you can buy it for any lens that varies between 2.95 3.1-inches in diameter, for $60. [DSLR Solutions via Planet5D via Photoxels] Jbbi This Warm-Water Shower System Will Make Camping Considerably More Comfortable
For those with obsessive-compulsive tendencies, fingerprin
stanley mugs ts over the screen of their tablet must be a living hell. But a team of German scientists think they can help with, of all things, a candle. Making a surface that can repel water is easy. So why is it difficult to make one that repels oil I
stanley travel mug t to do with oil low surface tension: to make a surface that can repel it, you need a very particular kind of surface roughness. And while that sounds easy, nobody has yet managed to really work out how to achieve it. But now a team of researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research in Mainz, think they ;ve found a solution. Using, um, a combination of candle soot and silica baked at just the right temperature. Look, I didn ;t say it was hi-tech, right They ;ve trialled the idea with glass 鈥?which is notoriously bad for showing up finger prints. Firs
stanley bottles t they held the glass over the candle, which caused soot to be deposited on its surface. These little spheres of soot were 30 to 40 nanometers in diameter, and stacked fairly loosely. In fact, 80 per cent of the coating was empty space, giving just the right roughness required to shed oils. To fix the soot in place, they coated it with a silica shell 25 nanometers thick. Finally, to get rid of the black color of the soot, they baked the glass at 600C, making it transparent. The result Grease-proof glass! They even managed to take high-speed photos of little drops of peanut oil bouncing up