by zooboff May 22, 2004
Get the homograph mug.The Homograph is a quadratic function designed to help confused people to determine whether they are gay or not. It was developed in the 21. Century by a curious group of students. y=1/0.02*(x-2)^2+100 is the formula. To determine if you are gay just stick in the number of times you use #NoHomo in a sentence to x. If your Output is negative, i got bad news for you.(The Output is in percent Straight,y<0 means you are gay)
by Gay_Curer69 May 15, 2019
Get the HomoGraph mug.by WhyAmIHungry July 17, 2016
Get the holographic mug.A material or trait in something that has SHIFTING FREAKING RAINBOWS. Commonly confused with iridescent colors which only shift from one color to another, and also confused with plain non-shifting rainbows.
Her holographic purse is everything!
The rainbows shifting under that sun roof is holosexually arousing me!
The rainbows shifting under that sun roof is holosexually arousing me!
by curiosity1234 May 3, 2017
Get the Holographic mug.The study of prostitutes.
I'm taking hoagraphy 101 and I was wondering if I could use your sister as an example for a research paper.
by DownUnderDJ April 15, 2008
Get the Hoagraphy mug.The pokemon card everyone wanted, and thought was so rare, but every kid on the block actually had one. A badass mother fucking fire breathing lizard.
Joe: holy fucking shit, I just got a holographic charizard in my pack!
Dave:dude, so did I! It's so rare, we must be the only ones in the state with them!
Joe: this card is worth so much money!
Dave:dude, so did I! It's so rare, we must be the only ones in the state with them!
Joe: this card is worth so much money!
by Staerzl the big show October 10, 2011
Get the Holographic charizard mug.A type of photography invented by the Lomographic Association, a company founded in the early 90s in Austria to market the Lomo LC-A, a cheap Russian camera which the founders had discovered took strange, high-contrast photos that often featured vignetting (the focus goes soft and the image darkens around the edges).
Today Lomography is mainly used to describe the "art" of taking photos with a Lomographic camera, or any camera sold by the Lomographic Association (popular examples include the Fisheye, Lomo LC-A, and Holga). The term is also sometimes used to describe photography using any cheap or quirky cameras.
The Lomographic Society has come under very severe criticism for several points, the main one being that the company seems to sell cameras and photographic equipment for far, far more than it's worth. Notable examples include the Lomo LC-A itself, which was around $30 USD when the original Lomographers first purchased it, yet sells for around $250, or the new Diana+, an updated version of a camera that originally sold for $1 that is currently sold by Lomography for $50. The Lomographic Society also seems to emphasize wild experimentation with (expensive) film, which some point out might be a ploy to get consumers to purchase more film from the Lomographic Society themselves.
Recently (as in early 2007-ish), the Urban Outfitters chain of stores have begun to stock Lomographic cameras, giving the brand a much larger audience to cavort around green pastures snapping photos willy-nilly and calling it art.
(As much as I hate the Lomographic Society for their sales practices, I must admit that I do regularly use my Lomo LC-A, as well as my Holga and my Diana+. I also buy film from them very often. Hey, it's a mean business practice, but Lomography is fun as shit.)
Today Lomography is mainly used to describe the "art" of taking photos with a Lomographic camera, or any camera sold by the Lomographic Association (popular examples include the Fisheye, Lomo LC-A, and Holga). The term is also sometimes used to describe photography using any cheap or quirky cameras.
The Lomographic Society has come under very severe criticism for several points, the main one being that the company seems to sell cameras and photographic equipment for far, far more than it's worth. Notable examples include the Lomo LC-A itself, which was around $30 USD when the original Lomographers first purchased it, yet sells for around $250, or the new Diana+, an updated version of a camera that originally sold for $1 that is currently sold by Lomography for $50. The Lomographic Society also seems to emphasize wild experimentation with (expensive) film, which some point out might be a ploy to get consumers to purchase more film from the Lomographic Society themselves.
Recently (as in early 2007-ish), the Urban Outfitters chain of stores have begun to stock Lomographic cameras, giving the brand a much larger audience to cavort around green pastures snapping photos willy-nilly and calling it art.
(As much as I hate the Lomographic Society for their sales practices, I must admit that I do regularly use my Lomo LC-A, as well as my Holga and my Diana+. I also buy film from them very often. Hey, it's a mean business practice, but Lomography is fun as shit.)
Person 1: Hey, I just got a Holga from Urban Outfitters.
Person 2: Cool, dude! You just had $10 burning a hole in your pocket, did you?
Person 1: What the fuck? That thing cost me $75!
Person 2: What a rip. Also, know that the film for those things is $5 a roll, not including development, which you'll have to get done at a specialty camera store because drug stores don't develop that kind of film.
Person 1: FUCK.
Person 2: That's Lomography for you.
Person 2: Cool, dude! You just had $10 burning a hole in your pocket, did you?
Person 1: What the fuck? That thing cost me $75!
Person 2: What a rip. Also, know that the film for those things is $5 a roll, not including development, which you'll have to get done at a specialty camera store because drug stores don't develop that kind of film.
Person 1: FUCK.
Person 2: That's Lomography for you.
by lovesmesumcake October 10, 2008
Get the Lomography mug.