RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘Paints’

Detroit Agate: Auto Factory Paints Accidentally Form ‘Fordite’

20 May

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Sculpture & Craft. ]

shaped fordite

Culled from paint deposits in old car factories, these may look like exotic gemstones, but their colors reflect years of layering and hundreds to thousands of assembly-line stops. They are frequently referred to as Detroit Agate, or simply: Fordite.

fordite image

Workers at the time, and urban explorers in later years, grew fascinated and started chipping off the results to save and ultimately shape into jewelry and other objects.

fordite rings

Historically, automotive bodies were painted by hand, and the spray-painted layer would drip onto surrounding surfaces and equipment (or simply be coated indirectly).

natural detroit aggregate

The pain would end up backed onto these surfaces, where it would solidify and grow thicker over time, up to inches over the years.

fordite encursted form

Like layers in a rock to a geologist, these faux-minerals tell stories of automotive history through their vibrant and varied colors, including changes in favorites over time. While you can still find this in raw form or polished pieces online, be warned: pre-1970s layers may contain lead.

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Sculpture & Craft. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Detroit Agate: Auto Factory Paints Accidentally Form ‘Fordite’

Posted in Creativity

 

Hypercolor Architecture: Paints React to Light, Heat & Touch

25 Nov

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

colorchangingpaint

The 90s are back and better than ever, with Hypercolor-style material science now making its way onto exterior surfaces, robust enough to withstand external weather but with the same color-changing properties you know and love from those once-cool t-shirts.

coloradaptivetouch

Potential applications of Olikrom are many, from tracing air paths across model airplanes wind tunnel simulations to creating buildings that change color, brighten or darken by night or day.

Prefab panels could be installed, or existing buildings repainted to create desired effects in all kinds of different conditions, from wall-touch interactivity to colors optimized around sky conditions or times of day.

Of course, there are many fun possibilities as well, like adding color-sensitive paint to coffee mugs to determine how hot and full they are, or creating a really cool every-changing car paint pattern as show in the video above.

light painting

Taking the playful side a bit further, variants on Neverwet-style, appear-on-demand graffiti are also possible – hidden appear-after-dark messages or stealth art on sidewalks and walls, or more on the practical side: touch-or-temperature-activated warnings when streets are wet.

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Hypercolor Architecture: Paints React to Light, Heat & Touch

Posted in Creativity

 

Nameless Paints: Cleverly Coded Tubes Show Color Composition

05 Oct

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

nameless paint content color

Instead of names or swatches, this series of minimalist paints comes in tubes that show off constituent colors that double as lessons about how complex hues and shades are created.

nameless paint closeup view

The nameless tubes are intended to eschew the use of words altogether and thus avoid existing associations, representing contents instead as a combination of three primary colors (cyan, yellow and magenta) with dots indicating relative amounts. The effect simultaneously divorces the product from names and looks in favor of a more abstract representation scheme that recalls unintuitive systems like binary.

nameless paint image series

These 2012 Kokuyo Design Awards-winning visual labels hint at contents and teach kids how to make their own mixtures. The paints themselves will be on sale later this year.

nameless tube paint colors

“By not assigning names to the colors we want to expand the definition of what a color can be, and the various shades they can create by mixing them” says creator Yusuke Imai, who made these with design partner Ayami Moteki (via Colossal and Spoon & Tamago).

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Nameless Paints: Cleverly Coded Tubes Show Color Composition

Posted in Creativity

 

Abandoned Ship: Artist Paints Figure Onto Floating Ruins

22 Sep

[ By Steph in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

ship graffiti 2

Hawaiian artist HULA paints the head and arm of a floating woman onto the rusted steel surface of an abandoned ship, all while balancing on a surfboard. The woman’s face appears and disappears with the tides, the rising water sometimes only revealing her hand. This large-scale guerrilla mural is the latest waterside work to be completed by HULA, who’s known for his unusual balancing act technique.

ship graffiti 3

Otherwise known as Sean Yoro, the Oahu-born, NYC-based artist gained attention this summer for translating his oil paintings on canvas to urban surfaces located along canals or other bodies of water. HULA’s favorite subjects are bathing women, painted with photorealistic detail onto crumbling concrete.

ship graffiti 1

The artist was inspired to create ‘Ho’i Mai’ (which translates to ‘Come Back’) on the stern of a half-sunken ship off the Hawaiian coast after watching the water rise and fall as the tides change throughout the day.  Floating out to work alongside the ship on his paddle board, HULA hand-painted the image without the apparent use of a projector or, in fact, anything other than a few cans of paint and some brushes.

ship graffiti 4

Yoro hopes to turn the ship into a public work of art rather than just a forgotten vessel left to slowly sink into the water over the decades. The painting won’t last forever, though, as the artist uses traditional oil paints knowing they won’t stand up to the elements for long.

ship graffiti 5

“I use it in a traditional old masters’ technique, mixing both loose brushwork with very tight strokes of sharp lines,” he told CNN. “I’m always trying to make the paint have a juicier texture to really help the portrait come alive. Oil paint outdoors definitely isn’t the best and it doesn’t last nearly as long as acrylics, but I kinda like that my figures have their own lifespan.”

Share on Facebook





[ By Steph in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Abandoned Ship: Artist Paints Figure Onto Floating Ruins

Posted in Creativity

 

Balancing Act: Artist Paints Seaside Murals from a Surfboard

23 May

[ By Steph in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

hula 1

Painting a hyper-realistic mural outdoors is challenging enough on its own, and artist Sean Yoro not only pulls off incredible portraits, he does it all while balancing on his surfboard. Known as HULA, the Oahu-born, NYC-based painter meticulously crafts stunning images of women onto waterfront walls. Each of the figures seems to be emerging from the surface, the rest of them unseen in the depths.

hula 8

hula 3

“Now entering the street art game. Better grab my surfboard, paints, and get as far away from the street as possible,” the artist jokes on Instagram. In the scant three days since he posted his first seaside mural image, Yoro’s work has exploded across the internet, as much for the quality of his paintings as for the unusual way in which they’re produced.

hula 7

hula 2

hula 4

Yoro scouts locations at abandoned riverside sites where concrete meets the shimmering surface of the water. The rough, weathered surfaces provide a gritty backdrop for the photo-realistic imagery, making his subjects seem all the more otherworldly in comparison.

hula 6

hula 5

In some shots, mangled metal dangles down from partially demolished buildings as Yoro works, his paint cans set up on one side of his surfboard as he kneels in the center.

hula 9

The series is entitled ‘Pu’uawai,” which means ‘heart.’ Of the first image he completed, Yoro says “This piece was inspired by the silence beneath the surface of the water, when all you can hear is your heartbeat as everything else fades away. It’s one of the many places I call home.”

See more on Yoro’s Instagram, @the_hula.

Share on Facebook





[ By Steph in Art & Street Art & Graffiti. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Balancing Act: Artist Paints Seaside Murals from a Surfboard

Posted in Creativity

 

Top 10 Photo Shoot Tips Using UV Paints

10 Jun

Hong Linh Photography UV Paint Shoot inspired by African Tribes featured on Fashion Photography Blog (FashionPhotographyBlog.com)Last time FashionPhotographyBlog.com spoke to Linh Le from Hong Linh Photography she had informed us that she had finished a photo shoot over a weekend that involved UV paints. The results resulted in a beauty shoot inspired by African tribes. From the feedback that we received about that post, we asked Linh if she could tell us more about the technical aspects of putting a shoot together for our readers. Linh shares with us her top tips for photographers who are thinking about taking on a shoot with UV paints and the key things to look out for.

1) Control all lights, including the ambient light! Linh revealed that failure to do so can have unflattering results, as she explained “My rehearsal shoot was a complete disaster! I set everything up in my living room and it was quite late at night, so there was no light coming through the window blinds, doors etc. My plan was to use our dim light as the ambient light. But the results were just horrible. The skin looked extremely uneven and red. It was really frustrating; I tried all sorts of settings. But that was not the problem; the problem was the lighting, the colour temperature of the lights. They were too yellow. So, I changed the LED fairy lights, which I used as back light, to a different set and because the shoot was during the day, I was able to use the daylight coming through the thin curtains and the results were completely different.”

Hong Linh Photography UV Paint Shoot inspired by African Tribes featured on Fashion Photography Blog (FashionPhotographyBlog.com)

2) Use a tripod, Linh recommends, in order to get sharp images, it is essential to use a tripod here.

3) Use a fast shutter setting and a low ISO, the settings Linh used were 1/8 sec, f2 and ISO 200.

4) To help your camera focus in such low light, Linh also recommends that it is also helpful to use a torch.

5) Test the colors first – Linh advises that “Some of the colours such as gold and silver glow less than others, so make sure you test them out first and mix them if necessary.”

6) You don’t need to go all out on expenses. You can pretty much get all you need cheaply in one site as the photographer revealed that “Getting all the supplies for the UV shoot was easier than I expected. I ordered the colours and two UV light tubes on Amazon, which were about £60 altogether.”

7) Use low wattage for subtle effects as Linh explained “As I did not want the glowing effect to be too extreme, I only used 20W UV lights, so this will depend on your personal style and taste.”

8) Using fabric as backdrops has its advantages. You can play with the effects of different backgrounds simply by changing the color or pattern of fabrics. Linh shared that “For the background, I bought curtain fabric which was dark but had interesting patterns on them which I wanted to be visible on the image.”

9) To get some back light in order to separate the model from the background, you can use fairy lights as the photographer has done on her shoot.

10) When asked if she can give us one last secret, Linh shared that getting the balance of lighting right is essential, “I think the secret lies in finding the perfect balance between the UV light and the ambient light, which is a matter of trial and error.”

There you have it, according to Linh Le, that’s basically all you need to set up a shoot with UV paints. Of course, shoot requirements may vary, depending on the result you want to achieve.
According to the photographer, the biggest challenge with doing UV shoots is to find the best lighting setup and camera settings and finding the right balance for your shoot can only be figured out through experimentation.

I hope this anyone who is thinking of doing a UV shoot and don’t know where to start. We’d love to see and hear about your results! Once again, we’d like to thank Linh Le from Hong Linh Photography for sharing her top tips for doing a shoot using UV paints. Do you have another tip? Post them in the comment section below.

Hong Linh Photography UV Paint Shoot inspired by African Tribes featured on Fashion Photography Blog (FashionPhotographyBlog.com)

To find out more information and see all the images from Linh Le’s UV shoot as well as other shoots, you can check the blog on her website www.honglinhphotography.com

You can contact her via e-mail: mhlinh.le@gmail.com

message Linh on her website: www.honglinhphotography.com
or Facebook page (Hong Linh Photography).

Photo Credits:
Photographer: Hong Linh Photography
Make Up Artist: Sophie Le
Models: Wendy Ng & Ana Santos


Fashion Photography Blog

 
Comments Off on Top 10 Photo Shoot Tips Using UV Paints

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Photographing UV Paints With Linh Le

23 May

Hong Linh Photography Tribal Shoot With UV Paints - Fashion Photography Blog (FashionPhotographyBlog.com)

When Linh Le from Hong Linh Photography told me that she was going to be shooting an Ethiopian inspired shoot with UV Paints, I thought what an unusual concept yet I couldn’t help wondering how it would turn out. Then she showed me the photos that she shot that weekend and I was drawn in by the beauty images that she achieved. I knew I had to speak to her about the images she created and hope that it would be able to inspire the fellow artists that follow this blog, to let imagination take over and to think outside the box.

Linh Le has remembered constantly taking photos, she explained that “I have always loved taking pictures, especially when on holidays, but they were more tourist pictures lol. Then in 2010, I went on a big Asia trip. It was my first time in Asia, (even though I’m Asian haha), and I wanted to capture the breathtaking landscape as well as the culture there in a deeper way than just with standard tourist pictures. This is when I bought my first DSLR camera. So, I started off with a lot of travel and landscape photography and when I moved to Cardiff, I decided to join Cardiff Camera Club to learn more about photography. The club offered a lot of practical opportunities, such as different projects and one of them was ‘people photography’. I have always loved fashion and beauty make-up, so I decided to do a beauty series with the theme colours. Luckily, I had a friend who was really into doing make-up (Sophie) and a friend who was a former model in Mongolia (Khaliun) and so, I set up my first studio shoot. From that moment on, I knew that this is what I wanted to do and I started learning more about fashion/beauty lighting as well as posing and I used all my friends as models to practice shooting as often as I could. Photography has become my passion and a very big part of my life. It is a way for me to express myself as well as to bring in different creative aspects of myself, for example, I love to play with fabrics and create my own outfits and accessories for photo shoots. I couldn’t imagine my life without fashion photography.”

Hong Linh Photography Tribal Shoot With UV Paints - Fashion Photography Blog (FashionPhotographyBlog.com)

I asked Linh about why she chose to start experimenting with UV paints for this beauty shoot, she replied “I love experimenting and trying out new things and shooting with UV paints was an opportunity for me to bring my creativity to a whole new level. In addition to that, UV paints are an exciting way to focus more on Make-Up art as well as lighting.” I was intrigued and asked Linh if she could elaborate on the inspiration for the shoot, “My inspirations always come out of nowhere at random times, but mostly before I go to sleep lol. I was thinking about doing a tribal inspired shoot for awhile and I was browsing through Pinterest when I came across some UV make-up shots and I thought it would look amazing with the tribal make-up. However, I didn’t want the UV paint to stand out so much that you don’t see any other details of her [the model’s] face any more, so it was then a long process of trying out the balance between the UV light and the ambient light.”

If Linh could summarize her style, she states, “I would describe my style is elegant, yet soft and dreamy. I try to tell a story with my image, visualising the kind of life that person might lead or the emotions they have in that situation. My concepts are often inspired by different cultures or social issues that I have experienced or encountered in my life. Therefore, the images are mostly a reflection of myself in some way.” To create this beauty shoot Linh detailed that, “I used my Nikon D7000 on a tripod. For the lighting, I used led fairy lights hanging on the backdrop and a 20W UV light tube on each side of the model.”

Hong Linh Photography Tribal Shoot With UV Paints - Fashion Photography Blog (FashionPhotographyBlog.com)

To find out more information and see all the images from Linh Le’s UV shoot as well as other shoots, you can check the blog on her website www.honglinhphotography.com

You can contact her via e-mail: mhlinh.le@gmail.com

message Linh on her website: www.honglinhphotography.com
or Facebook page (Hong Linh Photography).

Photo Credits:
Photographer: Hong Linh Photography
Make Up Artist: Sophie Le
Models: Wendy Ng & Ana Santos


Fashion Photography Blog

 
Comments Off on Photographing UV Paints With Linh Le

Posted in Uncategorized