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Tired of the same old colors you're getting with plain flash photography? Want your ultra-wide La Sardina shots to pop with color? Grab your Fritz the Blitz and meet me after the jump!
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You love those Supersampler shots but after some time, don't you think you always get the same old sequential shots? Add some color gel filters, and TADA! Your boring shots immediately become fantastic!
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What to use your Pop9 to get colorful patterns? Get your Pop9 at dusk, add color gels to your flash, aim at cool subjects, and enjoy the results of a Pop9 colorsplash!
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My version of "life_on_mars'" tipster on rasta filters. Find out how I created my rasta filters after the jump.
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Don't lose your precious gels ever again... It's sooooo simple!
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Open up your chakras, grab this edition of the Colorsplash Flash, and welcome the wonderful world of color bursts and splashes on your subjects!
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Color filters easily taped to the Diana Flash!
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My beloved Diana Mini produces beautiful shots on her own, but with the added color I get from the Diana Flash and the color gels, my mind goes crazy.
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Always wished of getting those dreamy pictures that the Diana F+ offers, but on 35mm film? Well with the Diana Mini you can make all those wishes come true....on square AND half-frame shots!
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Use your multiple exposure camera to make your images shift and stutter for an otherworldly weirdness.
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Change out the standard two colors in your Color Splash with other color filters for a more customized color wheel. Just use caution.
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After years of doing everything to avoid flashing my subjects, I got to know the Diana Flash. It is just another perfect addition to this wonderful camera.
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I was bored with always having 9 identical images from my Pop 9 camera and while waiting for a new POP 9+ camera that allows multiple exposures I had the idea of making a multiple exposure film playing with some black tape to darken some of the 9 lenses. The greatest difficulty is to reload the film so that the second exposure matches in the best way possible the first one to recreate the usual 3x3 image grid.