Wow. There are some great axes in there. And the carving of Marcus' is very impressive.
Printable View
Wow. There are some great axes in there. And the carving of Marcus' is very impressive.
Marcus that is impressive.
It's said that working with your hands or playing an instrument can be inspiring and uplifting(more than obvious with the enthusiastic creativity on this forum), the inclusion of traditional culture adds a dimension.
Awesome.
I built this for my 11yr old nephew. He is a mad AC/DC fan so it just had to be a SG-1 All stock PBG in Wudtone Carmine Gypsy.
http://pitbullguitars.com/wp-content...1yz3-image.jpg
http://pitbullguitars.com/wp-content...58s2-image.jpg
http://pitbullguitars.com/wp-content...53st-image.jpg
I hope the pictures come out the write way.
http://pitbullguitars.com/wp-content...656a-image.jpg
http://pitbullguitars.com/wp-content...7702-image.jpg
Jase, nope they're upside down. Are you seeing them the right way? What software are you using for your photos? And also, what browser are you using?
Is anyone else seeing Jase's pics upside down?
And here I was thinking it was my over consumption of Wild Turkey that was the issue.....
The photos were taken and sent from my Ipad. It was explained well in "My Diary Build" for DCJnr. Not that I understood it but it was well explained. Techno Fear!!
Upside down Miss Jane..
Guitar looks great Jase.
Shame about the fake turf background :(
Low maintanance garden = more time dicking arounding with all things guitar and musical....
Photos taken with iDevices (iPad etc.) store the images in the orientation of the device when they were taken and then set the 'Orientation Tag' in the images' EXIF data to say how they should be displayed. For example, if you hold an iPad inverted when you take a photo, that's how the image is stored and its Orientation Tag is essentially set to say it is inverted. Now, when that image is viewed on a device that utilises the Orientation Tag, like iDevices, it inverts the image so it appears the 'right way up' (and as far as you know, it is the right way up).
Other platforms/browsers may not use the Orientation Tag when displaying an image, so it displays in the orientation is was taken, ie. upside down. This is often particularly evident in thumbnails in some browsers, but when you click on the image to expand it the Orientation Tag is usually then used and the image displays correctly.
There are basically two ways to avoid this issue:
1) Always hold your iDevice in its default upright orientation when taking a photo and orientate your target object appropriately, that way no rotation needs to be done.
2) Take the photos holding your device any way you want, but then always run the photos through some image processing/editing software to rotate and store them in the orientation you want, so that all platforms/browsers will see them the same way.