Hygloss Products Metallic Foil Board Sheets – 8.5 x 11 inches – Silver, 25 Pack
Product Description
Hygloss Products Make and Mail Postcards
These colorful postcards are a great addition to your classroom and arts and crafts time.
Say goodbye to lost letters! The postcards measure 4 x 5-1/2 inches each and come in a variety pack of 25 bold, assorted colors such as Blue, Green, Yellow, Orange and Pink. Colors may vary in each pack.
Premium Design
They are made from durable, medium-weight card stock paper that holds up great in the mail. Even if you are mailing them across the world! The paper contains no acid or lignin which helps prevent them from fading.
Unique Arts and Crafts Activity
Children and adults have a blast with these postcards. Use them to keep in touch with pen pals, holiday card giving, classroom activities, party invitations, teacher’s notes, and so much more. Each card is blank on the front, so you can decorate and embellish with markers, stickers, paint, etc. The back is printed with address lines and stamp positioning when you are ready to send your message.
The Hygloss Products Make and Mail Postcards are proudly made in the USA!
Price: $9.82
- REFLECTIVE POSTER BOARD – These shiny metallic foil boards sheets will add some sparkle and shine to your next project. They are the perfect background or embellishment to make your craft really “pop.”
- 25 SHEETS OF FOIL PAPER – Each metallic foil board sheet measures 8.5 x 11 inches and is made of durable 12 pt. card stock. The card stock is easy to cut using craft scissors or a die-cutting machine.
- COLLECTION OF BOLD COLORS – With 10 different colors to choose from, there is a style for everyone. All the colors are fabulously reflective with white on the reverse side of the paper.
- LIMITLESS CRAFT IDEAS – The metallic foil board is great for scrapbooking, holiday decorations, gifts, party and wedding décor and much more! The possibilities are truly endless!
- MADE IN THE USA – Hygloss Products are proudly made in the USA. The goal is to make sure you are getting a product of unrivaled quality at a great price.
Daily Disney – Monday Method – Too Drunk and Tired to Remember
View On Black
See where this picture was taken. [?]
On Mondays I share a picture that maybe takes a little technical know how or creative thinking and try to explain a little how I got the shot.
When HDR really makes sense.
The great Spanish Conquistador / photographer, Tom Bricker, once said "I have never seen an excellent night shot of this pavilion. Never. That doesn’t mean they’re not out there, I’ve just never seen one. There is too much dynamic range, and shots are always either too dark, suffer from many blown highlights, or have color issues. I was highly skeptical as to whether I could do it, but I think this 3 exposure shot captured most of the shadows without blowing too many of the highlights." Tom hit the nail right on the head.
As I stumbled along the World Showcase promenade past Mexico and towards the entrance to Future World (somewhat drunk, but mostly just pooped) I noticed the great Spanish Conquistador / photographer, Tom Bricker up on the steps of the Aztec pyramid setting up his tripod. Matt, Jeff, Don and I believe Sarah (I don’t remember, like I said, half drunk) had already made their way on to Future World probably scoring their epic shots of Spaceship Earth, but not Tom. Tom was bound and determined to conquer Mexico at night. And he did. You can see his outstanding "The Mexican Conquest" shot "here". The funny thing is, I don’t even really remember taking these exposures. I’m really surprised I even got three bracketed exposures off. Really surprised. My guess is that Tom was hogging the space in front of the pyramid so my only shot was this odd composition that at the time probably seemed interesting. A wide angle lens would have helped tremendously. I’m never going to Disney World without my UWA again!
So yeah, for a scene such as this, exposure bracketing coupled with HDR, or tone mapping, can really make the picture. Like Tom said, there is just too much dynamic range for a single exposure to capture. Scenes like this can really be deceiving because to the eye it doesn’t look like that much dynamic range. But as evident here, -1, 0, +1 (don’t ask me why I did that because honestly I have no idea… I usually expose 7 shots when doing HDR’s) wasn’t even enough.
I’m not done with this character – this Mexico pavilion. Oh no. We shall soon meet again.
Quick EXIF:
Camera: Nikon D300
Lens: Sigma 24-70mm f/2.8
Mode: Aperture Priority (EV bracketing 0, -1, +1)
Exposures: 4 sec, 2 sec, 8 sec
Aperture: f/5.6
Focal Length: 24mm (36mm full frame equivalent)
ISO: 100
Bias: N/A
Thanks for stopping by!
By Express Monorail on 2009-10-03 22:20:39