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Attention all photo lovers. Here’s a Do-It-Yourself roulette table complete with game chips. Perfect for a casino-themed game night!
Your very own photo-fied roulette table!
What you’ll need
Colored printer
Scissors
Tape or glue
Access to the internet
How to
To do this, have a layout handy for reference and position photos of primarily red hues where the red numbers go and those predominantly black in place of the black numbers. (You can easily find layouts by doing a web-engine search).
Need you ask where to find photos for this project? The Lomography website is your oyster! Look in our new Colors section to look up red and black photos now, and have fun while at it!
Using a program which can be as simple as a word document, resize photos and line them up, three per row and 12 per column.
Now type in the numbers that are quintessential in making any roulette game possible! We suggest white text.
Once you have the bulk of the layout, either print this out and manually draw in what should go on the perimeter or print out a found layout online and assemble, cut and tape accordingly!
On a larger scale you could build a LomoWall and use this instead! Hang it up proudly when you aren’t entertaining with it.
Re-purposed plastic film canister caps game chips
What you’ll need
Film canister caps (our suggestion is to ask friends, photo lovers, and conveniently friends who are photo lovers, to donate to your cause).
Colorful markers
How to
This is as easy as pie! (Though we suggest eating sandwiches and foods of that nature when playing card games, after all this is the reason Lord Sandwich popularized this form of food in the first place).
Pop the plastic caps off the canisters and lay them out on a flat surface.
Roll some markers your way and begin writing numbers in different colors corresponding with values on the caps. We did red-five, blue-ten, green-25 and black-100.
With its 170° lens mixed with features such as multiple exposure, bulb mode, and flash, the Fisheye No.2 is perfect for nights out. Here we share some tips on how to get the best low light photos with your Fisheye No.2.
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The Lomomatic 110 is your compact companion for every adventure! Featuring a glass lens, automatic exposure, day and night aperture modes, controllable ISO settings and a flash, get ready to capture your memories in vibrant, super-sharp 110 frames, with a depth of field you’ve never seen on a 110 image ever before!
Dublin-based Photographer Gavin Lowndes has been experimenting with a mix of Lomography films for a variety of different photo shoots and talked to us about the preparation that goes into shooting with film.
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