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Posts Tagged ‘Gold’

Black Gold Hotel

26 Sep

Im vergangenen Jahrzehnt ist die Wirtschaft der Mongolei mit beispielloser Geschwindigkeit gewachsen. In jedem Jahr stieg das Bruttoinlandsprodukt um mehr als zehn Prozent.

Das Wachstum des Landes rührt größtenteils aus einem Boom in der Bergbauindustrie, denn die Mongolei verfügt über große Vorkommen an Bodenschätzen wie Kupfer, Gold und nicht zuletzt Kohle. Globale Branchengiganten haben längst begonnen, enorme Summen in das zentralasiatische Land zu investieren.

Eine Kohlestaubwolke schwebt über einer Straße durch die mongolische Steppe.

Ein chinesischer Bergarbeiter blickt in den sonnigen Himmel.

Der italienische Fotograf Michele Palazzi hat über drei Jahre hinweg das Land mehrfach besucht und den wirtschaftlichen Auf- und den gesellschaftlichen Umschwung in der Mongolei dokumentiert.

Wie die unregulierte beschleunigte Entwicklung des Landes die traditionelle Lebensweise der viehtreibenden nomadischen Bevölkerung bedroht, zeigt er in seiner Arbeit „Black Gold Hotel“.

Ein Kameltreiber steht zwischen seinen Tieren.

Wasserdampf steigt aus dem Kessel in einer Jurte auf.

Eine junge Frau liegt auf dem Sofa und schläft.

Viele mongolische Familien haben die traditionelle Lebensweise inzwischen aufgegeben und sind in große städtische Zentren gezogen, um Arbeit in der Industrie zu finden. Nicht selten führt sie dieser Entschluss jedoch in den finanziellen und sozialen Abgrund, nämlich dann, wenn sie aufgrund des immensen Zustroms an Gleichgesinnten keinen Job finden.

Zwei mongolische Ringer kämpfen miteinander

Paartanz auf einer Veranstaltung in einer Turnhalle.

Der Fotograf begleitete die Nomaden auf ihrem Zug durch die Steppe, lernte die neuen Stadtbewohner kennen und verbrachte einige Zeit mit den Bergarbeitern. Nah ist er an den Menschen, einfühlsam und unaufgeregt zeigt er uns, wie sie leben.

All diesen Menschen gemein ist, dass sie bestmöglich versuchen, mit den Umständen umzugehen. Doch Umweltverschmutzung durch Müll, Kohlestaub und Industrieabfälle vergiften die Vegetation und machen denen, die wenig haben, das Leben schwer.

Ein mongolische Junge sitzt auf dem Rücken eines Kamels und schaut in die Weite der Steppe.

Eine Bushaltestelle in der verschneiten mongolischen Steppe.

Inspiriert zu dieser sehr persönlichen Arbeit, so der Fotograf, habe ihn der Film „Die Geschichte vom weinenden Kamel“. In ihm stecke viel Poesie und auch ein nostalgisches Element, dem er nachgehen wollte.

Doch auch einen journalistischen Anspruch habe er an das Projekt gehabt, selbst wenn er sich selbst eigentlich nicht als Journalisten betrachte.

Ein Mann steht auf einem voll beladenen Lastzug mit den Habseligkeiten der Nomdenfamilie.

Zwei im Bau befindliche Hochhäuser in der Nähe eines der Kraftwerke in Ulan Bator.

Sein politisches Interesse habe ihn 2009 nach seinem Studium an der Scuola Romana di Fotografia zum Bildjournalismus geführt, erzählte Michele Palazzi mir. Er habe stets den Drang, zu verstehen, warum etwas so ist, wie es ist und den Dingen auf dokumentarische Weise auf den Grund zu gehen. Doch erachte er seine Sichtweise keineswegs als absolut maßgeblich oder objektiv.

Ein Parkplatz vor einer Mauer mit der Aufschrift Dream Land.

Eine Kellnerin deckt den Tisch in einem Restaurant.

Der Modernisierungsprozess in der Mongolei habe ihn schier überwältigt. Als er das erste Mal die Hauptstadt Ulan Bator besuchte, habe er beim Anblick des Stadtbildes sehr gemischte Gefühle gehabt – eine ungare Mischung aus Chaos, Nostalgie und Ausweglosigkeit, die ihm übel aufstieß.

Dass sich die Modernisierung nicht einfach anhalten oder gar umkehren lässt, sei Michele bewusst. Auch wolle er keinesfalls etwas oder jemanden konkret verurteilen. Ihm sei es in erster Linie persönlich wichtig, zu dokumentieren, was ihn umtreibe.

Blick aus einem Wohnblock in einer Plattenbausiedlung in Ulan Bator.

Eine junge Frau steht vor einem Spülbecken und trocknet sich die Hände ab.

Eine junge Frau spielt Tischtennis.

Ohne Förderung, ohne Auftrag widmete er sich seinem Projekt und unternahm immer wieder auf eigene Kosten Reisen in die Mongolei, um seinem Thema auf der Spur zu bleiben.

Viele Menschen habe er kennengelernt, zeitweise bei ihnen übernachtet, ihnen bei der Arbeit geholfen, mit ihnen gegessen und mit den Kindern gespielt. Es beweist, dass er mit Hingabe bei der Sache ist. Er sammelt nicht nur Bilder ein, er lebt die Story.

Fans feiern während eines Konzerts einer mongolischen Metal-Band.

Zwei Männer stehen an einem Feuer auf einer Mülldeponie, wo sie nach Wiederverwendbarem suchen.

Eine junge Frau bereitet sich auf ihren Auftritt als Striptease-Tänzerin vor.

Herausgekommen ist eine Reise in Bildern in den Alltag der Menschen im ganzen Land, von den Familien in der Wüste Gobi, die sich trotz aller Schwierigkeiten entschieden haben, den Traditionen der Steppe treu zu bleiben bis zu den Jugendlichen in Ulan Bator, die eher einen westlich orientierten Lebensstil führen.

Von den Kindern der Armen, die gezwungen sind, im Zivilisationsmüll nach Schutz und Essbarem zu suchen, bis hin zu denen, die auf der Suche nach dem Glück in der Stadt das Nomadenleben hinter sich gelassen haben und jetzt zwischen beiden Welten gefangen sind.

Ein Mann steht zu Silvester auf einer verschneiten Dorfstraße und zündet Feuerwerk.

Eine junge Frau beim Karaoke.

Wer sich weitere von Micheles Arbeiten anschauen möchte, dem empfehle ich an dieser Stelle einen Blick auf seine Webseite.


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin | Fotocommunity

 
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Posted in Equipment

 

Finding Gold in Your Image Archives

24 Apr

No doubt like many other photographers, so many of my images have never seen the light of day. This is mostly for good reason; they are out of focus, poorly composed, badly timed, they just don’t make the cut. Often these images may be good, just not the BEST. I have learned though, that there can be gold hiding in your archives, just waiting to be rediscovered, taken into the develop module and shared with the world. I have found that spending some time digging through old shoots can yield some very positive results.

Make it part of your workflow to revisit your image archives

Maybe you have found that your photo editing workflow follows a predictable pattern, like mine. After importing, adding metadata, then backing up RAW images from a shoot, I like to take a first-pass look at the images, flagging the few that initially jump out, and rejecting those that are clearly unusable. It is easy to then go through again and pick out images that have potential, before filtering the flagged images and comparing them to find the sharpest or most accurately exposed selects. This gives me a small collection of images to edit.

Then comes the fun part! Using any combination of Adobe Lightroom, Photoshop and Nik Software, I edit my images to see what they can become! After editing the selects, I like to back them up both locally and online to my Photoshelter portfolio, which doubles as my image archive in the cloud. Finally, these images are shared on social network accounts. Done, right? On to the next project, assignment, location…

But maybe not. Of the images imported from CF cards, I might end up with between 1-5 images that I’m happy with. So if I come home from shooting an epic landscape with 50-100 images, what happens to the other 95% of my shots? If you’re anything like me, you probably have gigabytes worth of RAW images taking up space on your hard drive. Have you ever revisited a hard drive to find something you may have missed? I make this a regular part of my workflow and I would argue that doing so is well worth your time.

To give you an example, here is an image I made not long after moving to Mount Maunganui, New Zealand a couple of years ago. This is a shot of Tauranga Bridge Marina:

Tauranga bridge marina 1

Having driven past this location dozens of times, I already had an idea of the shot I wanted before I arrived. It was a cold night, and the sky hadn’t lit up in the way I was hoping, so I stayed past sunset and into twilight, my favourite time to shoot. Still nothing very inspiring, so I went home. I followed my usual workflow and ended up with the image above, which I wasn’t entirely happy with, so I moved on to the next thing.

Fast forward six months and I found myself revisiting that folder in Lightroom. I don’t remember what prompted it, but after finding this image, I edited it very differently and ended up with the image below. It was far better received by fans and clients online and became one of my top selling images last summer. Personally, I like this image a lot more than the first.

Tauranga bridge marina 2

Time is on your side

Of course it’s easy in hindsight to kick myself and wonder how I missed it, but this seems to happen on a regular basis. Something about the passage of time can help you to see images in a fresh light. Maybe it’s feeling differently about the image itself, or that particular place, or simply that my post processing workflow has evolved and I can see new potential in images. Whatever the reason, I rarely feel the same about an image a month, six months, or a year later.

Here’s another example from Castlepoint, in New Zealand’s lower North Island:

Castlepoint lighthouse 1

And here’s the image I found and edited more than two years later:

Castlepoint lighthouse 2

Make it a project

It’s natural for any artist or creative to be looking forward to the next project. I think it’s healthy for any artist or creative. It’s a necessary part of growing and developing your craft. I also think, however, that it’s healthy to reflect on previous work and see how far you have come. Searching image archives is a great way of doing this. Despite not having shot film since I was a child, I liken this process to rummaging through boxes of exposed negatives and taking them into the darkroom to find the gold that has never been printed.

I challenge you, if you don’t already, to spend some time rummaging through your archives. Go way back! To some of your earliest photographs! Or even something you shot last year; it doesn’t matter how old they are, just that you are looking at it with a fresh perspective. Make it your next project. You might be surprised what you come up with!

Have you found any hidden gems in your archives? Share with us in the comments below.

The post Finding Gold in Your Image Archives by Rowan Sims appeared first on Digital Photography School.


Digital Photography School

 
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Live Crabs, Gold Bars & iPods: 18 Weird Vending Machines

28 Jan

[ By Steph in Culture & Cuisine & Global. ]

Weird Unusual Vending Machines

Forget crackers and candy bars – you could be buying live lobsters, bike parts, whole heads of lettuce and even freshly baked baguettes with the push of a button from vending machines across the world. In fact, if you’re willing to blow into a breathalyzer and show your ID to a camera, you can even get a bottle of wine. These 18 vending machines take instant gratification to surprising extremes.

Anger Release: Break a Plate

 Weird Vending Machines Anger Release

Few things are more satisfying when you’re feeling livid than smashing a fragile object to smithereens. This vending machine caters to anyone who needs to release some anger , offering your choice of statues, vases, plates and glasses in highly breakable materials – though you won’t get to break it yourself. The satisfaction comes from watching the item fall into the bottom of the machine.

Live Crabs & Lobster

Weird Vending Machines Live Lobster

Weird Vending Machines Live Crabs

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Vending machines aren’t exactly the most humane places for live animals to live, but that doesn’t stop people from offering both lobsters and crabs that you can either take home and kill yourself or have cooked at a restaurant. ‘Lobster Zone’ is actually an arcade game where you have to manipulate a mechanical claw to pluck a live lobster from the bottom of the tank. The slogan is ‘You catch ‘em, we cook ‘em!’ In China, vending machines offer Shanghai Hairy Crabs in a range of sizes for $ 1.50 to $ 7.50

Bikes & Bike Parts

 Weird Vending Machines Bikes

Weird Vending Machines Bike Parts

The Bike Dispenser will spit out a dorky looking bicycle in exchange for your cash. While it’s just a concept, the idea is that you can either bring the bike back to the original vending machine location when you’re done, or ride it one-way to another machine. The bikes are fitted with RFID chips to keep track of them.  In New York, cyclists can find another bike-related vending machine that’s actually pretty handy: Bikestock offers bike parts, tools and locks as well as food and a quick tire fill-up.

Blue Jeans & Socks

Weird Vending Machines Socks

Weird Vending Machines Jeans

Let’s say you’ve landed at the airport in a strange city after a red-eye flight only to find that the airline lost your luggage. You might be happy to see vending machines filled with blue jeans and socks. The brand ‘Closed Jeans’ has installed vending machines in train stations across Europe. Sock vending machines offer everything from colorful, stylish options to the most basic white athletic socks. The latter can sometimes be found in bowling alleys.

Hot Pizza, Mashed Potatoes & Chicken

Weird Vending Machines Pizza 

If you’ve ever stared at the sad, cold offerings in a vending machine, wishing you could have some hot pizza instead, you might be in luck (if you can actually find one of these.) Pizza vending machines have been common in Asia for a while, and are now popping up in the U.S. thanks to Wonder Pizza USA, which offers steaming nine-inch whole pizzas in two minutes. If you prefer to mainline your refined carbs, hoover up some instant mashed potatoes and gravy at your local 7-Eleven courtesy of Maggi’s gross mashed potato machines. Other hot foods that can be procured disturbingly quickly with the push of a button include french fries, hot dogs, fried chicken and even squid.

 

Eggs & Fresh Lettuce

Weird Vending Machines Lettuce

 

Weird Vending Machines Eggs

Lettuce doesn’t seem like an ideal item for a vending machine, considering its tendency to wilt pretty quickly. But this particular machine takes care of that problem by actually growing the lettuce on sponges under fluorescent lighting. Chef’s Farm, found in Japan, can produce 60 heads of lettuce per day. In rural Japan, where convenience stores are hard to come by, it’s not uncommon to find vending machines offering cartons of eggs.

 

Fresh Bread in Paris

Need a freshly-baked baguette at three in the morning? If you’re in Paris, you’re in luck (for a number of reasons). A baker decided to take advantage of the August holiday season, when most bakeries close up shop, by offering a 24-hour baguette vending machine filled with partially cooked loaves that are finished off just when you need them. The baker, who lives above his shop, came up with the idea after being repeatedly disturbed by potential customers knocking on his door after hours.

Gold Bars

Weird Vending Machines Gold Bars

Isn’t it annoying when you need some gold bars fast, but all the banks are closed? Gold to Go has got you covered with blast-proof, camera-guarded vending machines that will dispense small wafers of gold in exchange for your cash. The prices are updated automatically every two minutes to keep up with constantly fluctuating gold prices. The machines can be found in airports and shopping malls in Abu Dhabi, Austria, Switzerland, Germany, Great Britain and a few U.S. locations.

Beer & Wine with a Side of CCTV

 Weird Vending Machines Beer and Wine

 

Show your ID to a real live person watching you via CCTV from a call center, blow into a breathalyzer to prove you’re not already drunk, and you can get a bottle of wine from a vending machine in Pennsylvania. The kiosks, introduced in response to the state’s archaic liquor laws, can be found in grocery stores. In Japan, some vending machines will pour you a pint of draught beer, while others offer a range of cans. For a promotion, Amstel offered free beer to any customer who could stand completely still in front of a vending machine for three minutes.

 

iPods & Other Gadgets

Weird Vending Machines Best Buy

 

Weird Vending Machines iPod

Best Buy’s airport kiosks are an increasingly common sight, offering last-minute, travel-oriented gadgets like digital cameras, phone batteries, headphones and pre-paid international cell phones. Better hope you press the right button, because if you need to return something, you’ll have to call an 800 number and wait for a prepaid label to come in the mail. Vending machines offering virtually every iteration of the iPod have also been spotted, and it’s almost guaranteed that they aren’t endorsed by Apple. 

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[ By Steph in Culture & Cuisine & Global. ]

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Nearly deleted photo helps shot putter secure gold

23 Aug

shotput.png

Reuters photographer Kai Pfaffenbach found himself unexpectedly on the other side of the lens at the IAAF World Championship Men’s Shot Put Finals. His photo of Germany’s David Storl was used as evidence in a decision that overturned a ‘foul’ call and awarded the athlete a gold medal. When it was called into question whether Storl stepped outside of the ring in his attempt, Pfaffenbach discovered that his remote camera clearly showed Storl’s attempt to be fair. Click through for more.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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9 May, 2013 – What’s The Gold Standard of Inkjet Papers

09 May

Ilford has recently introduced five new inkjet papers. How do they compare to the previous "gold standard"? Find out in our latest paper review article, writtten by Mark Segal and Michael.

         

"Yes I downloaded the videos. THEY ARE AWESOME!!! I learned so much I think my brain is going to explode.


The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
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Radical Face – Always Gold (Live)

06 Jan

This session was recorded at Paradiso in Amsterdam, The Netherlands on February 1, 2012. Singer-songwriter Radical Face plays the song Always Gold, which is on his album The Family Tree: The Roots. Watch more of our video’s on www.FaceCulture.com and follow us on http
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
 

Gold Panda: “Quitters Raga” [OFFICIAL]

27 Nov

Music: “Quitters Raga” by Gold Panda Shot on: Nikon D90 — 50mm, 12-24mm Directed/Edited by: Cody Bralts, October 2009 Location: Urbana, Illinois – United States Copyright 2009 Ghostly International
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
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Awesome Gold Section Intro (3D-HD)

31 Jul

Awesome Goldsection Animation intro. Actual description of what do we do and how do we do that. Includes some unproduced commercial, musical and other video content snippets. 12” will look nicer with anaglyph eyewear on =.) because it involves 3D and our beloved Blake the Flying fish.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
2 Comments

Posted in 3D Videos

 

3D BBI Gold Animation (red & cyan glasses required).

17 Dec

Contact us for a pair of free 3D glasses info@atticusdigital.com Shortlisted for a Cardiff Design Festival award, Atticus produced this 3D stereoscopic animation for biotechnology company British Biocell International (BBI), to demonstrate the differences between high quality and low quality gold colloid, in a diagnostic test kit. This was produced in anaglyph format and shown at the American Association for Clinical Chemistry (AACC) conference, where it delivered plenty of ‘wow-factor’. This production was in anaglyph format, which meant the glasses were of the red and cyan type. Not as clear or colourful as with polarized glasses but very cost effective and easy to display on conventional monitors.
Video Rating: 0 / 5

This slide-show is in 3D.To see it wear red/cyan anaglyph glasses
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
 

Rolling slide show in Proshow Gold – Photoshop/Photography Week 15

02 May

Create a slide show where the images scroll up the screen. Gavin Hoey shows you all the steps you need so you can recreate this effect using Photodex Proshow gold or producer.