Boostingaz
Well-known member
Love the weld together kit! If you need some alpha/beta users let me know!![]()
X2
Or heck just let us know when and where they go live. I've got a buddy down the road that would really dig that!
Love the weld together kit! If you need some alpha/beta users let me know!![]()
Love the weld together kit! If you need some alpha/beta users let me know!![]()
Thank you guys! I will for sure let you all know when they're up for sale, and hopefully that's not breaking any site rules about advertising.X2
Or heck just let us know when and where they go live. I've got a buddy down the road that would really dig that!
Thank you guys! I will for sure let you all know when they're up for sale, and hopefully that's not breaking any site rules about advertising.




Any recommendations for a shorter focal length lens for my Canon EF?
The way they handle the soft glass with such apparent ease was impressive to me. No doubt it's a skill that is acquired slowly and with much repetition. You said it well, really fun to learn about what goes on behind the walls of the workshop we'd driven by in the past.Really neat with the glass-blowers. My wife and I were in Sandwich MA a few years back (ok almost 18 now) and stopped a glass blower that operated out of his own home shop. It was really, really neat to watch him and his wife work together. They met at a conference in Corning NY - he of MA and she of Japan. For our anniversary that year, I ordered a set of Martini Glasses and a Pitcher from him for my wife.
Connections with folks are great and the "wow, I didn't know you did that here" factor is always cool too.
Thank you!The DIY welded truck is really neat!
Not sure how wide you are wanting, and I have no specific Canon recommendations, but on a crop sensor a 35mm is nice to have. Nikon makes a cheap (well... in the world of photography!) 35mm prime that's fast (f/1.8 I think?), — essentially similar specs and quality to their standard 50mm. I'm sure Canon has an option like that. 35mm is considered a "normal lens" on a crop sensor, and with f/1.8 you can still do portraits, throw out the background, etc. Even shorter focal length primes that would be considered fisheyes like 18mm, 14mm etc are gonna be pricier.
The vase is really cool. I strongly prefer art objects that are local / one-off / actually made by artists vs. a commercial object from a chain store. Sometimes harder to come across, but more meaningful. Like you alluded to, objects gain meaning when they have a story or you know something about who created it, the process it took, etc.
The coneflowers are a nice match, too![]()



I don't know for sure when my sister got my camera, but it must have been around 12 years ago. Some day I will probably upgrade my camera body, but that's a long ways from now. It was really convenient to just carry around the new zoom lens and have the ability to change focal length on the fly while at the park.Nice pick up! 10-24mm should give you some creative options with the wide angle stuff.
Back when I was 'in the game', I preferred primes for their speed. And their price. But I started with a Nikon D40x body, which is 16 years old now, and then moved to a D90 which was released 15 years ago. Both crop sensors and at the bottom of the Nikon range at the time. Sensors have gotten exponentially better since then, so I feel like having f/1.8 available on a lens is less critical when it comes to light and exposure. When out and about, it was also a pain to carry a bag and 3 different lenses.
The pics of the new lens look GREAT.

Looking great![]()
Thank you for the positivity! Lots of good things happening in life, I'm very grateful.
Looking great![]()
Can't say that I miss the gorgeous views of rocks, concrete, and cactus. The temperatures never bothered me too much, but one of my favorite parts about moving back to SD is the cool, moist mornings of spring and fall.I did say looking great secretly not knowing what all that green stuff is. At 113dg for 20 days straight or close to it we don't know what green is.

Yeah Mark, I almost instantly took a liking to the new Tamron lens. There's something liberating about a prime lens in that it removes a variable from the shot setup allowing you to focus on other aspects, but the versatility of a zoom lens is in the same realm of usefulness - just in a different way.Austin, you're going to love the 10-24 if you don't already! Primes are great, and offer amazing picture quality, but for everyday life, a zoom really adds convenience.
For years I used an 18-200mm f3.5-5.6 as my goto lens and it worked great for candid stuff with my kids in most settings. Indoors I'd add a flash.
The Weld it Yourself project looks very cool!
@nicholam77 I had a D90 which was a great camera. I upgraded to a D7000 more than ten years ago, which I still use today, although I too am largely 'out of the game.' My next change will be to go mirrorless.



Back in my "prime" I MIG welded an awful lot of 11ga open corner joints. Certainly not as simple as thicker material, but perhaps not as difficult as you might think.So will this come with Mig settings...? I think with my welding skills I would melt this to the ground...very cool though.

Oh goodness, one of those machines that doesn't use real numbers for settings... Reach out to me through Instagram DM's next time you have the welder fired up and I'll do my best to tune your machine from afar. Of course I would recommend buying multiple truck kits in the unlikely case you accidentally destroy one... plus you said "kids" - plural means you need at least one per kid!I now hate you and your welds. Those are fantastic!! The kit is cool something I can do with the kids. I'm in - and will def take you up on the settings. Have a Millermatic 130.
They will be on Joel's website - https://overkillracingandchassis.com/Where will be able to buy the truck models?










Looking good. I prefer the grey shingles, too.We're planning to paint the house and do some siding repair. Yesterday we picked out a color at Sherwin-Williams and I made an edit to see how it would look. We plan on using a solid body stain on the shakes to match the siding color.
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Thanks Mark! Don't get it twisted, we love the Pig! If it weren't for the rust issues bubbling beneath the surface I'd have nothing but pride in that machine. I'll reserve the right to complain about how much real estate there is to detail on/in it though!The house looks great, Austin! Go easy on the Pig. We had one years ago and it was great for family trips and towing. I get it, it is big. And its thirsty. But it also gets the job done, usually with room and power to spare.
Nick, your analysis and criticism is always welcome here on my thread! That's a neat looking home that you found there too, and I have to say right off the bat that it's making me consider stained tongue and groove for the soffits. I've been trying to think of ways to tie in the lighter stained deck with the house, and I think that would be a great way to do so.The new shingles look great! I could probably use a new roof, but I'm waiting on my own hailstorm
I know you're a designer and it's your house, but here's an outside perspective on the colors and materials that you didn't ask for
...I like the the original two tone of the green + natural cedar shakes. It looks rustic and charming. I assume that maybe you're wanting to get away from that, but IMO the monochrome look would be more effective if you got rid of the shakes and continued the vertical siding all the way up. So it's one color, one material, one texture, nice and simple.
The dark green does blend into the landscape and I like that, but if you're not already married to it you could also consider a darker shade of brown. It would still be earthy, blend in, give you the darkness, and in that case maybe leave the cedar shakes natural and they'd be in the same color zone. I guess this would have a cabin-y A-frame feel, but I like cabin-y.
If you are committed to the double green, I would also consider making the trim the same green, instead of black, for a true monochromatic scheme. I could be wrong and you'd have to mock that up / visualize it in your head, but in my opinion dark green and black are quite similar. Kinda like navy and black. Usually casing and trims are contrasting, or in the case of most 'Modern' houses, the same color. I would however in this scenario set the door apart, like a medium-toned natural wood door would look nice. I couldn't find a dark green pic, but this is kind of what I'm getting at with the same color trim and contrasting door:
Please know I am not criticizing your plans at all and it will turn out great whatever you do, I just like the design of your house and can't help myself! And I know some of the things I mentioned involve additional alterations beyond paint and stain. So merely food for thought.
P.S. The DIY-weld-it instructions are very neat
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