Camera Lens Calendar
Tech Blog —
... seen the zoom camera lens coffee cup and transparent Nikon D80, now check out the world's first camera lens calendar. One caveat: you may need glasses or a magnifying glass to view the date. Click here for one more picture.
It's not clear whether it's powered or requires some very dexterous manipulation but if the price is right, I could see it becoming one of those, "what do you get somebody who already has everything" gifts.
[via Yankodesign]
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Camera Lens Calendar brings the date into sharp focus
DVICE Atom Feed —
... not a photographer, this Camera Lens Calendar has a certain fun factor, letting you spin the focus, f-stop, and a couple of other rings until the current day and date is exposed.
Now all designer Sharad Haksar needs to do is power up this clever creation, making it a slow-moving battery-powered electric clock that always shows the right date. It's already on its way to stores at an undisclosed price, but that one last detail will bring its appeal into sharp focus.
Via Yanko Design
Camera Lens Calendar Sadly Doesn't Focus to Infinity [Cameras]
Gizmodo —
The traditional zoom SLR lens shape makes for fun object mods. First the conceptual zoom lens mug (which I'm still waiting for), and now this calendar, apparently headed for production, from designer Sharad Haskar. [YankoDesign]
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Creative camera lens packs calendar
SlashGear —
... The world’s first camera lens is Haksar’s latest art work, designed commercially for corporate gifts. According to a reader here, it’s available to custom order now from his ...
Really affordable camera lens calendar is just what your layoff asked for
Engadget —
... It's a camera lens... no, wait. It's not. It's actually a calendar to goes up to the year 2032, designed by artist Sharad Haksar. It's apparently made from a solid piece of aluminum, though nobody seems sure if this is a manual calendar or one that is powered and ...
camera lens calendar f. stops in the year 2038
technabob —
Photographer Sharad Haksar chiseled this unique camera lens calendar from a single block of aluminum. I love the idea, but at $2000 for a calendar that runs out of years in 2038, I don’t know I could justify the $66+ per year price tag.
[via Yanko Design] ...


