![]() ![]() The Steady Shot Bot Kickstarter campaign is happening right now. ![]() Although we’re are delivering a finished product, the Steady Shot Bot is Open Software and Hardware – meaning its design is freely available to be downloaded – to encourage DIY customers to share and customize it.” Although the final product is injection molded, using 3D printed parts allowed us to evolve the design faster than traditional methods. The current product design is the result of many iterations of 3D printed prototypes. “The 3D printing and DIY spaces have really fueled the project. The robot is meant to give amateur photographers a leg up without costing them an arm and a leg. Then, he had to get them to wok in sync: the motion controller moves the camera, at the same time, the intervalometer directs the camera to take a picture.Īnd the Steadycam? That’s just to record uber-smooth video. He knew that he wanted to use a 3D printer and open source hardware to figure our how to combine a 4-axis motion control system, an intervalometer, and a Steadicam gimbal. “It occurred to me there needed to be a tool that provided high-end studio capability to the casual photographer,” said David. As a result, he invented the Steady Shot Bot, and, in the process, formed a start-up dedicated to multi-function, open hardware photography equipment in Los Angeles. ![]() David Johnson wanted to give photographers a robotic tool that would lessen the workload and, so, set out to create the ultimate 3D printed tool to help photographers capture and create their best work. You’ve probably seen hundreds of time-lapse videos in your life, but you may not know that the process of creating a slow moving camera that takes hundreds of photos over a period of time is an expensive process. ![]()
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