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Posts Tagged ‘Lost’

Lost in Photoshop: another old photo restoration part i

29 Oct

I have a tip about straightening the rotation of images — particularly scanned images. the old photo is younger than 1901 and older than 1930, I believe. Given the image size (approximately 2 1/4 x 3 1/2) I would guess that it was taken by a Kodak Brownie (probably ‘2’) camera. The original image had faded quite a bit. I attempt to use various techniques to recover the image, including: level adjustments, use of high pass filter, use of surface blur filter, use of “split masks”, and attempting to reconstitute “depth” using linear burn (non-destructively) in an “overlay” [not the mode] layer.

 
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Posted in Retouching in Photoshop

 

The Incredible Lost and Found Art of Hand-Painted Signage

24 Oct

[ By Delana in Design & Graphics & Branding. ]

While technology usually makes things faster, it rarely produces the kind of unique and soulful results that come from the hearts and hands of humans. The sign industry fell as a casualty to a world obsessed with technology’s quicker, cheaper, utterly identical products. But a new generation of traditional sign painters is revitalizing this amazing trade, bringing the soul back to the business of storefronts and billboards.

(all images via: Princeton Architectural Press)

A new book from filmmakers Faythe Levine and Sam Macon details the history and current state of the surprisingly fascinating sign painting industry. (Princeton Architectural Press, the book’s publisher, provided WebUrbanist with a copy of the book for the purposes of this article.) The book tells the stories of sign painters, both young and old, and their take on their unique industry. Each segment of the book includes examples of the painters’ work and often glimpses into their workspaces.

As recently as the 1980s, it was impossible to walk down any street in America without seeing hand-painted signs of some type. Storefronts, billboards, murals, banners, and even street signs were hand-lettered with brushes and paint, relying entirely on the skill of the painter to make them readable and eye-catching. And their skill is considerable. Just imagine trying to paint a professional-looking sign – one that can not only rival a vinyl sign but outstrip it in terms of individual style – using nothing more than a toolkit of brushes and some jars of paint. The vast majority of us couldn’t do it.

In more recent years, distressingly homogeneous signs have largely – though not completely – taken the place of these carefully hand-lettered ones. The technology used to create signage today is fast and cheap, but lacks that human touch. Entire streets full of store fronts in any given city look exactly the same – laser-cut vinyl letters don’t allow for any type of personality or variation, and that is to the detriment of not only the sign painters, but also the general public and – maybe most significantly – the store owners themselves.

According to Sean Barton, one of the sign painters featured in Levine and Macon’s book, many business owners don’t want to invest in their shops like they used to. They would rather slap up a vinyl sign that costs next to nothing than take pride in their livelihood. A great-looking storefront with hand-painted signage is bound to attract more business than a shop that looks exactly the same as 20 other shops on the street. This is beginning to dawn on many business owners, says Barton – they are realizing the power of hand-painted signs and showing a new appreciation for this nearly-lost craft.

And that is what this resurgence of hand-painted signage is about: the power of individuality. Seeing the same lettering, the same color schemes, the same type of signs everywhere we go has made us immune to the sad fact that uniformity has taken over our cities. This is never more apparent than when we walk by a shop with carefully hand-painted signs. It, almost without fail, will seem like the coolest and most interesting shop on the street, even before we walk through the door. Why? Because that store owner took pride in his or her business and chose to display the individuality that other shops are missing.

Many sign painters working today began their painting careers under very different circumstances: as graffiti writers. It makes sense, in a way, to move from the illegal side of painting in public to the legal side. But can they possibly get as much enjoyment and satisfaction from painting the letters and logos of their clients as they did from tagging boxcars? Apparently, the sign painting business offers enough of a challenge to keep these modern-day artisans fulfilled. In sign painting, as in graffiti, planning and spacing are key – and in both, the painter’s personality and humanity shine through.

There is a deeper message here, not only for business owners but for all of America. When corporations began taking over the towns and cities with their homogeneous style and predictable experiences, we lost something. We lost the personable nature of Main Street and the colorful mish-mash of downtown. As our culture begins to pull away from the trap of corporate sameness, we will no doubt see at least some businesses return to the traditional art of hand-painted signs. And the sign painters will, as always, remain behind the scenes as the people who dramatically impact our buying habits, but about whom we rarely stop to think.


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Signs of the Times: 13 Architectural Signage Designs

Far from a postscript, the signage in these 13 structures serve as integral parts of each design, covering entire facades or standing hundreds of feet tall.
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Painted Alive: Boldly Brilliant Body Paintings

The human body can be and do so many things, but when it’s used as a canvas for fine art, truly magical things can happen.
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[ By Delana in Design & Graphics & Branding. ]

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SNOOKI lost weight with PHOTOSHOP Tutorial ( MAKEOVER )

21 Oct

The process of digital enhancing a picture with Photoshop (makeover) , in this case a Snooki’s picture.
Video Rating: 3 / 5

 
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Games Off: Artistic Echoes of the Lost Olympic Games

06 Aug

[ By Steve in Art & Drawing & Digital. ]


Three Summer Olympic Games and two Winter Olympic Games have been canceled since Athens hosted the inaugural games of the modern Olympiad in 1896. Few visual records of these “lost Olympics” exist besides prototypical promotional and/or postal artwork. The nostalgic glimpses of alternative Olympic history presented here were designed to glorify Mankind’s competitive spirit in a utopian world untainted by war.

1916: Games of the VI Olympiad, Berlin

(image via: Maison)

The International Olympic Committee‘s official records system is based on the concept of an “Olympiad” – an Olympic Year, as it were. Once that year has passed and regardless if any Games were held, the next Olympiad is denoted by applying the next consecutive Roman numeral. Thus the 1912 Games of the V Olympiad held in Stockholm, Sweden, were followed by the 1920 Games of the VII Olympiad held in Antwerp, Belgium. The Games of the VI Olympiad, scheduled to be held in Berlin, Germany, never took place after being officially canceled shortly after World War I began in the summer of 1914.

(images via: British Library)

Planning began on the 1916 Olympic Games almost immediately after Berlin was selected as the host city during the 14th IOC Session in Stockholm. Among other cities that applied to host the Games were Alexandria, Amsterdam, Brussels, Budapest and Cleveland.

(images via: Olympic-Museum.de)

The 64,000-seat Deutsches Stadion, or “German Stadium”, was built over the course of one year and was officially dedicated on June 8th of 1913 – it was closed in 1934 and the Berlin Olympiastadion was built on the site. Posters, travel brochures and postage stamps were designed with very little material seeing the light of day due to the Games being canceled two years before they were to begin.

1940: Games of the XII Olympiad, Tokyo

(images via: Bryan Pinkall’s World of Opera, Stamp Circuit and Newmexico51)

It may seem odd that the Summer and Winter Olympic Games were awarded to both Germany and Japan amidst the obvious increase of militaristic policies espoused by these nations’ governments in the 1930s. Then again, the Olympic Movement has always striven to keep athletics and politics separate. The 1940 Summer Games were scheduled to be held in Tokyo from July 20th to August 4th of 1940, with the Olympic flame to be flown non-stop from Germany via a never-before-flown Messerschmitt Me 261 airplane.

(images via: The Ephemera Network, Olympic-Museum.de and Carter’s)

The government of Imperial Japan never really got behind the 1940 Tokyo Olympics as Japan’s leaders fundamentally disagreed with the Games’ peaceful precepts and concepts… not to mention they had other, more pressing concerns.

(images via: Olympic-Museum.de)

By 1938 the Second Sino-Japanese War was raging and both Japan and the IOC seemed eager to find some excuse to abandon the 1940 Games. Things came to a head in July of 1938 when the government of Japan officially withdrew their support.

(image via: Wikipedia)

Though the 1940 Tokyo Olympics were still two years away, much preparatory work had been done in anticipation of the first Olympic Games held in Asia. The images shown here include both official and unofficial efforts to paint a positive picture of the host country though the stylized, helmet-wearing soldier in one poster may have undermined efforts somewhat.

1940: Games of the XII Olympiad, Helsinki

(images via: Harvey Abrams Books, Rlanvin and RigaStamps)

With little time to spare, the IOC scrambled to find a new host city and settled on Helsinki, Finland, which was the runner-up to Tokyo in the original bidding process. Helsinki was reasonably prepared to shoulder the burden of hosting a Summer Olympics having completed the Helsinki Olympic Stadium in 1938.

(image via: International Poster Center)

The 1940 Olympics were to see the debut of a new Olympic sport: gliding. War clouds were gathering over Helsinki as well, however, and the outbreak of World War II in September of 1939 prompted the IOC to cancel the 1940 Helsinki Olympics. Just as well… on November 30th, 1939, the USSR declared war on Finland and Soviet bombers appeared over Helsinki.

(images via: Olympic-Museum.de)

Finland would manage to hold off the Red Army in several wars outside World War II’s main theaters and Helsinki’s Olympic Stadium survived relatively unscathed. It was to be the centerpiece of the 1952 Summer Olympic Games which had the character of a postponement – even some of the promotional material from the lost 1940 Helsinki Olympics was revised and reused 12 years later.

(images via: ABC RadioNational and Telegraph UK)

Sharp-eyes are required to note one salient difference between the two Ilmari Sysimetsä-designed posters above: the outline of Finland in the 1952 poster is slightly smaller than on the original poster as the country lost territory to the USSR with the signing of the Moscow Peace Treaty in 1940.

1940: V Olympic Winter Games

(images via: German Postal History and Olympic Source)

A similar situation occurred regarding the 1940 Winter Olympics originally scheduled to be held in Sapporo, on Japan’s northern island of Hokkaido. The IOC first offered the Games to St. Moritz, Switzerland, but conflicts with the Swiss town’s organizing committee over the eligibility of professional ski instructors saw the IOC offer the games to Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, where they had been held in 1936.

(image via: USHMM)

A limited amount of promotional artwork was created in the very short time frame between June 1939 when the Games were awarded to Garmisch-Partenkirchen and November 1939 when Germany (and not the IOC) withdrew their official invitation.

1944: Games of the XIII Olympiad, London

(images via: Bryan Pinkall’s World of Opera and Olympic Games Marathon)

“Lucky 13″ strikes again? Never have an Olympic Games been as DOA as the 1944 London Olympics and their cold-season counterpart, the VI Olympic Winter Games awarded to Cortina-D’Ampezzo, Italy. The official IOC election for the 1944 Summer Olympic Games’ host city took place in June of 1939, in London, England. The defeated applicants (in order of votes) were Rome, Detroit, Lausanne, Athens, Budapest, Helsinki and Montreal.

(images via: Covers of the World and Stamp Circuit)

The year 1944 happened to mark the 50th anniversary of the IOC’s founding, however, and Switzerland issued a series of stamps commemorating the event. The stamps are display the name of Lausanne, the Swiss town where the IOC’s headquarters is located. Other stamps marking the never-held 1944 Olympics were handmade by Polish prisoners at the Woldenberg POW camp after being granted permission by their German captors.

(image via: MWB)

Surprisingly enough, modern-day designers haven’t completely forgotten the so-called “forgotten Games of 1944″. Topman has released a new line of A.D shirts displaying graphics influenced by the stillborn 1944 London Olympics. The graphics offer an intriguing look at what might have been though it’s much more likely the ’44 Games would have been much like the post-war Summer Olympics hosted by London four years later.

(images via: IWM and Uncle Eddie’s Theory Corner)

Italian dictator Benito Mussolini had already placed his bets on Rome winning the 1944 Summer Games, and had commissioned several pieces of statuary (above) to be placed in the “The Mussolini Forum”. As for Cortina-D’Ampezzo, the IOC continued its practice of postponing instead of canceling: the Italian alpine town graciously and successfully hosted the VII Olympic Winter Games in 1956.

(image via: Healey & Wise)

Lost in any discussion of the Lost Olympic Games are the crushed hopes of the athletes, many of whom trained for years leading up to a promised moment of glory. Four years is a long time in the life of an athlete; eight years can be a lifetime. Five canceled Olympic Games (and several boycotts) are more than enough – and that goes for the catastrophic global events which led to their cancellation.


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[ By Steve in Art & Drawing & Digital. ]

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GTAIV The Lost and Damned

20 Apr

GTA IV : the Lost and Damned Joined the Master as he takes on the latest installment of bikes, bastards and beatdowns in Grand theft auto IV’s Lost and Damned FOR MORE MACHINIMA GO TO: www.youtube.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

A young Dexter encounters arsonist Gene Marshall and is forced to rethink his methods.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 

How LOST Should Have Ended

06 May

Who wants some eternity water? Whether you loved it, hated it, or just didn’t understand it, there’s no denying that everyone has an opinion on how it should have ended. For those unfulfilled fans, here’s our take. Check out our website for cool extras: www.howitshouldhaveended.com How It Should Have Ended Comedy Series LOST Sci Fi Action Animation Animated

Bunnies use the force to give us the intergalactic epic in no time flat. The 30-Second Bunnies is a troupe of bunnies parodies, a collection of movies by re-enacting them in 30 seconds, more or less. Watch them all at www.starzbunnies.com 30 Second Bunnies Animated Animation Flash Comedy Series Sci Fi Star Wars

 

A Village Lost and Found by Brian May & Elena Vidal (EPK Part 1)

23 Mar

“A Village Lost and Found” by Brian May & Elena Vidal …The London Stereoscopic Company [Part 1]

 
 

Recover Lost Hard Drive Data With Free iCare Data Recovery 3.6 Software

28 Dec

Here's the latest free hard drive data recovery program to be offered, and as always I advise you to maintain separate, removable media, to back up your precious digital photo files.

Of course the use of removable media for backup extends beyond your photo files and should include all files that you consider "must haves."

The "iCare", "Data Recovery 3.6" Software, is a bit more advanced than some past free offerings and deserves a look, especially since it's free.

Besides the usual …

Digital Shot

 
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