When you are setting up your shot, mentally divide it into thirds. This is classic photography trick for aligning your subject within the photo. ![]() Play with it, master it and marvel in your handiwork. You can brighten, sharpen and reduce the yellow cast effect which comes with bad lighting. But… most of my photos are edited on my phone. Yes, I have fancy editing software because I love all that stuff. Somewhere in the middle there you’ll find the perfect shot with the perfect expression. ![]() I never take one… in the digital era you can get trigger happy and snap away to your heart’s content. I have some fabulous shots of the kids but there are hundreds of others either side of the perfectly caught moments that frankly are terrible. Today I’m sharing a few tips to make the most of your family photos while showcasing an alternative way to display them at home on printed glass.ĥ Photography Tips To Make the Most of Family Photos ![]() How many photos do you have of your kids? How many of them get beyond your phone? I absolutely love photography, particularly candid shots and my Instagram feed. Further down the road, the company will work on bringing its service to mobile via an app, and then later expanding to new materials, as well as offering different displaying techniques.This post is sponsored by Fracture but all opinions expressed are my own. Now that Fracture has stabilized its production process, it’s ready to start pushing demand by using the new funding mainly for marketing purposes. The company now has a team of 11 working at its 5,300-square-foot manufacturing, packaging and sales facility in downtown Gainesville. Pricing ranges from as low as $12 up to $125 for large portraits, and custom sizes are also available. Though TAFI tipped a couple of local papers about its investment, the company itself never officially confirmed TAFI’s new funding until now.įracture glass prints are available as portraits, landscapes or squares (which work well for Instagram photos) in a range of sizes, and they’re available as either wall or stand mounts. Now, as of April 2013, TAFI upped its second half from $340,000 to $500,000, based on Fracture’s performance. Last May, the state’s Tamiami Angel Fund (TAFI) committed to $750,000 in funding, which the startup received $410,000 of initially. The company ships on average 30-40 orders per day worldwide, at margins around 40 to 50 percent.įracture raised over half a million from friends and family in 2011, then in September 2011, received a $1 million commitment (convertible debt) with $530,000 as the initial disbursement from the Florida Opportunity Fund. But while the startup has done very little marketing during this ramp-up period while it has been stress testing its manufacturing process, it pulled in $86,000 in gross revenue during its first year shipping, and this past year, it has grown that number to $700,000. Explains Lokesh, “ glass had always been something that was very specialized, meant just for large-scale industrial purposes, and we looked at this giant vacuum that had left as far as a consumer photo opportunity - which is that printing framing has not changed in decades.”įracture didn’t really begin shipping product until later in 2010, says Lokesh. ![]() Though photo printing on glass is not new, the company has developed a proprietary UV-based digital photo-to-glass manufacturing process, which, as we’ve detailed before, allows the photos to last for at least three years in direct sunlight, or up to a decade with careful handling before any fading.īased in Gainesville, Fla., (also home to Grooveshark), Fracture was founded in 2009 by University of Florida graduates, Abhi Lokesh and Alex Theodore. Lokesh’s background is in biology, but his passion for technology later found him working in an undergrad lab at the university focused on building calibration technology for the Mars Phoenix Lander mission. Theodore, meanwhile (who Lokesh calls the “MacGyver of our times”), has been an avid photographer since his pre-teen years and has a degree in chemical engineering.īoth founders had a desire to modernize photo-printing, drawn to the science and the technology behind building up their own manufacturing process from scratch. Fracture, a digital “maker” startup offering an on-demand system for printing your photos on glass, has raised an additional $500,000 on top of its previous $1.5 million in outside funding, following a year that saw the company’s revenue double.
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