You will need to know how much space each picture consumes. You camera should allow you to adjust your capture settings. An average high quality print quality photo is between 1.5 and 2.5 MB per picture.
You can tell if a Pokmon card is a 1st edition by looking for a small "1st Edition" stamp on the card, usually near the left side of the illustration. This stamp indicates that the card is from the first printing of that particular set.
Yes, all digital cameras will tell you how much memory is left for storing pictures. Check your manual for the camera for details.
Depending on your settings, the number of photos that a card will hold varies. 11mb of space is a very small capacity for a memory card, and will likely only hold a handful of pictures. Your camera should indicate how many shots remain when you have the camera turned on, in a shooting mode. The placement of this figure varies between makes and models. I would recommend checking your manual - it should tell you where this information can be found.
Hard to tell with no picture. Try and post it on ValueJockey. The community there can tell you. It is free and you can post pictures. Good Luck. http://www.valuejockey.com/
If you mean Pins: Pins are little pictures hidden throughout the island that you can put on your player card in the top left corner. If you mean badges/stamps: These are "badges you get when playing a game and you have a badge/stamp book where you can view them.
Look at your trainer card
there are 3000 pandas left over in the world
I can't tell for sure, but based on the pictures it looks like maybe some sort of rose.
If you are talking about the numbers on the bottom-left corner of a card, then no, the ID number on a card simply means its card number. Every kind of one card have the same ID number. These ID numbers merely tell what card it is.
Topps Tiffany has a glosser finish Than topps regularTiffany Card is a single card from the Tiffany set, a high end set of cards, issued by Topps. These sets were identical to the regular issue set, except for the higher quality white cardboard stock and the addition of a protective UV coating.For more baseball card collecting terms and definitions see Related links for the Glossary Of Baseball Collectible TermsbelowThe Easiest Way to tell is the Standard Traded Card, Not The Tiffany, Has Two (**) in the lower left corner of the card. Look at pictures of the backs of any Certified Cards on the internet for sale and all Tiffany Barry Bonds Cards from 1986 WILL NOT HAVE the (**) in the lower left corner.
fell the card
That depends really.... For pictures: # Have an SD card full of pictures. # Insert the SD card into the Wii. # Turn on the Wii. # Go to the Picture Channel. # Go to the SD card "block." But if you're talking about Homebrew, I cannot tell you...