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Archive for December, 2012

24 December, 2012 – The Synthesis of Chinese Landscape Painting and Photography

24 Dec

Traditional Chinese Landscape Painting has endured for almost 1500 years, longer than any genre in Western culture. What perceptual qualities (that we can see for ourselves) lie behind this? How can we adopt these to the medium of digital photography? Looking at the visual structure of paintings began for us as a way to analyze what makes a an image “work,” and it has grown into a fascination with a very different way of seeing – that of the classical Chinese Landscape painters.

George DeWolfe and Lydia Goetze explore this subject in their new essay The Synthesis of Chinese Landscape Painting and Photography. 

 


The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
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Enhancing Blue Skies in Lightroom

24 Dec

The Color control in Lightroom is a powerful tool for selective color adjustments. This tool allows photographers to adjust the hue, saturation, and luminance of individual color tones. One application of this functionality is enhancing blue skies:

Sydney Opera House

Photo of the famous Sydney Opera House with blue sky enhanced in Lightroom

How to Enhance a Blue Sky

In Lightroom 4, the Color control allows separate control of red, orange, yellow, green, aqua, blue, purple, and magenta:

Lightroom 4 Color Controls

Lightroom 4 Color Controls

A quick way to emphasize a blue sky is to lower the luminosity and increase the saturation of the blues and aquas in the image:

Enhancing a blue sky in Lightroom

With and without color adjustments

For this image, here are the settings I used:

Aqua

  • Hue: -18
  • Saturation: +20
  • Luminance: -43

Blue

  • Hue: 0
  • Saturation: +21
  • Luminance: -22

Make a Develop Preset

For extra credit, save these settings as a develop preset so that you can quickly apply them later. Note that settings that work to bring out the sky in one photo won’t be perfect for all photos, but this should give you a good starting point.

Here are the settings you need to capture for a sky enhancing preset:

Creating a Lightroom Develop Preset

Settings for a sky-enhancing Lr preset

For more detailed information on creating Lightroom Develop Presets, check out this post: 5 Tips for a Faster Lightroom Workflow.

I hope this technique proves useful next time you have a sky that needs just a little more oomph. I’d like you hear your thoughts on this article, please comment below or feel free to connect with me through Facebook or Google+. I’ll do my best to answer questions and reply to comments.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Enhancing Blue Skies in Lightroom


Digital Photography School

 
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Joe McNally – Lessons in a Flash at Melbourne DIGITAL SHOW 2012

24 Dec

It would be great if you nice people can like our facebook page: facebook.com Joe McNally – Lessons in a Flash, Melbourne DIGITAL SHOW 2012 Sorry for my shaking hands, coz I was watching, so didn’t pay much attention on recording. 🙂 Record by iPhone4S
Video Rating: 4 / 5

My Promotional EP is available on iTunes! bit.ly Dan Henig performs “Feeling Good” live in his basement. An A Capella looping performance. www.facebook.com/danhenigmusic twitter follow @danhenig Produced, Directed and Edited by Martin Elliot
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
 

The Rock Climber – Behind the Scenes with Simon Carter

24 Dec

Rock climbing photographer Simon Carter talks about what it takes to capture unique & awe-inspiring images that have launched climbing on the world stage. View Simon’s blog post mynikonlife.com.au

 

Nikon ML-L3 Remote Review

24 Dec

I would reccommend the remote to anyone, as I will be using it quite a bit despite most of the negative comments I gave it 🙂 Hope this review helps anyone looking for a remote.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
 

23. Dezember 2012

23 Dec

Ein Beitrag von: Resa Rot


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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Creative Fuel: 12 Appealingly Painted Oil Storage Tanks

23 Dec

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


Most oil storage tank farms are big, bland and boring, classic examples of form following function with the occasional company logo affixed to break up the visual monotony. Most but not all: there are a few artistically painted and decorated oil tanks that stand out from the rest due to their pleasing paint jobs rendered on a very large scale. Here are a dozen of the best.

Portland’s Maine Attraction

(images via: Portland Phoenix, PR Maine, Mainebiz and Mayo Street Arts)

When the Maine Center for Creativity launched the Art All Around public art project in the spring of 2010, they decided to think big and there are few canvasses bigger than the blank outer walls of oil storage tanks. Venezuela-born and London-based artist Jaime Gili was commissioned to kick off the project by decorating oil tanks at the Sprague Energy tank farm near the Portland International Jetport.

(image via: Boating Local)

When the plan was conceived, the question of how many tanks to paint was dependent on how much funding could be raised. “We know we’re going to do one,” stated Jean Maginnis, the Portland-based center’s founder and executive director. “We hope to do as many as three more.” In the event, a full 16 tanks ended up getting an extreme yet appealing makeover!

Store My Beer, Y’all

(image via: JJFlash229)

On a slightly smaller scale are these oil storage tanks painted to look like jumbo Budweiser and Bud Light cans located on SR 37 between Mcconnelsville and Crooksville, Ohio. At least they’re supposed to be oil tanks… what else could they hold?

Oh The Huge Manatees!

(images via: Roger4336 and The Sparky Chronicle)

Arriving and departing cruise ship passengers get the best view of the amazing manatees mural painted on a Citgo fuel storage tank adjacent to the Port of Tampa’s Garrison Channel. You can’t say it doesn’t brighten up the otherwise dreary gray overtone of this mainly industrial area.

(image via: Fifth World Art)

Dolphins and sea turtles accompany the manatees on this beautiful mural. Hopefully the tank never ruptures… considering its precarious location, the local dolphins, sea turtles and manatees would be rather less appreciative of the artwork depicting them.

Philadelphia On A Half-Tank

(images via: Paul Santoleri, LesMarCyd and LibbyRosof)

Old and busted: Venus on the half-shell. New hotness: Philadelphia on the Half-Tank! In 1999, the City of Philadelphia Mural Arts Program asked artist Paul Santoleri to express his vision of the city on an otherwise unremarkable oil tank located at Penrose Avenue and Platt Bridge. Santoleri’s whimsical look at a busy, lively Philadelphia occupies one side of the tank easily visible to anyone driving from the airport to downtown.

The REALLY Great Pumpkin

(images via: SkyscraperPage)

If you thought painting oil storage tanks was a recent trend, think again. The enormous jack-o’-lantern above was a regular fixture of Los Angeles’ Wilmington neighborhood from the early 1950s. Though it seems wasteful to paint an entire oil tank for just one day, things aren’t quite as they seem: the tank belonged to Union Oil whose main corporate color was orange.

(image via: eBay/237)

An 80,000-barrel oil storage tank certainly stands out in the middle of a tank farm, especially when it’s done up pumpkin-style and illuminated with spotlights. Union Oil wasn’t shy about plugging their community spirit either, as the 1962 advertising poster depicting the tank above perfectly illustrates.

(images via: USC Libraries, Yesteryear Remembered and Foxtongue)

Now owned by ConocoPhillips, the tank is ideally viewed from the 110 Harbor Freeway near Wilmington. Stop by for trick-or-treat on the 31st and you’ll actually get some treats.

Rust Never Sleeps

(image via: Kevin Raber)

Why paint oil storage tanks? They’re made of metal and spend their lifetimes outside, season in and season out without any other covering beside their paint jobs, that’s why. Getting artistic is the tank owner’s prerogative but the alternative is downright ugly – unless it’s creatively photographed, of course.

Whale Meat Again

(images via: Bimikyusin)

This fish oil tank painted up to look like a can of whale meat must have been quite a site to see… unless you’re a member of Greenpeace, that is. The 10.8m (35.4ft) tall and 8.5m (27.9ft) diameter tank was originally built in 1975 by Kinoya Ishinomaki Suisan, a seafood canning company from northeastern Japan. It received its garish paint job in 2006 when the company was looking for a way to promote its canned whale meat.

(images via: House Of Japan and Fuyuto)

The devastating Great East Japan Earthquake and tsunami of March 11th, 2011 hit the town of Ishinomaki hard and the oil storage tank even harder: it was toppled and swept 300 meters (985ft) from its original location. These images are the only records remaining of the tank; it was dismantled out of consideration for the feelings of local survivors of the disaster.

Grand Old Flag City

(images via: Trustypics)

Tanks for visiting Flag City, USA, otherwise known as Findlay, Ohio. This former 19th-century oil boomtown (yes, oil, in northwestern Ohio) still displays vestiges of its petroleum infrastructure with this patriotically painted oil storage tank sitting alongside Interstate 75 showing off Findlay’s fame for flags and fuel to best advantage.

Boston Gas’s Rainbow Swash

(images via: J. H. Kostro & Associates, KatieHodge/Get It Scrapped! and Elizabeth Thomsen)

In 1971, Sister Mary Corita Kent was asked by the Boston Gas Company to paint one of the 150-foot (46 m) tall LNG storage tanks located on the Dorchester waterfront. The so-called “Rainbow Swash” tank was torn down in 1992 but by that time it had become a well-known, much loved Boston Landmark and Kent’s design was re-painted on an identical tank standing beside the old one.

(images via: Me_Ram and Aesthetic Grounds)

Although Kent, who passed away in 1986, was an acclaimed artist at the time the tank was painted (she also designed the USPS’s “LOVE” stamp), she was also an avowed anti-war activist. More than a few people stated they could see a profile of North Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh in the tank’s blue stripe though Kent never admitted any intention to do so. Interestingly, the blue slash’s “nose” was rounded slightly when new owner National Grid re-painted the tank in order to reduce any perceived similarity.

Slam Dunk!

(images via: Silly America and Roadside America)

You can’t say America’s oil and gas refiners aren’t good sports, not when one of their spherical oil tanks has been painted in an athletics motif for 40 years! The tank located at the Marathon Oil refinery alongside Interstate 75 in south Detroit started off as a giant baseball to celebrate the success of the MLB Detroit Tigers. In 2004 it changed its look to honor the NBA Detroit Pistons on one side and the WNBA Detroit Shock on the other.

Oil Hail The King

(images via: Philadelphia Citypaper and Google Maps)

Petty’s Island is located in the middle of Delaware River between between Pennsylvania and New Jersey, though it’s officially part of the latter. The 400-acre island also happens to be owned by the Citgo Petroleum Corporation, a subsidiary of PetrĂłleos de Venezuela S.A., which happens to be owned by Hugo Chavez. What could possibly go wrong?

(image via: Back To Philaplace)

In April of 2009, Chavez blew a chance to be even more of a thorn in the American government’s side when he generously donated Petty’s Island to New Jersey provided it be used only “for environmental developments.” Amidst the wrangling between developers and environmentalists, New York-based guerilla artist Duke Riley scaled one of the Citgo fuel storage tanks and painted a mural of little-known legend Ralston Laird, who moved to the island in 1851 as a paid land manager. in his nearly 60 years on the island, Laird raised 10 children, proclaimed himself its King, and seems to have achieved fame as sort of an east coast Emperor Norton. As for Riley’s tank-top mural, it’s visible from space and made it onto Google Maps.

Send In The Tanks

(images via: Richard Messenger)

These two oil storage tanks displaying the visages of Syria’s late leader Hafez Assad and his two sons stand silently in the desert about 100km (60 miles) from the Iraqi border. How long they stand there is anyone’s guess, being that current president of Syria Bashar Al-Assad can be said to have a target on his back. These tanks present a pair of targets that would be very hard for anyone to miss.


(image via: Saatchi Online)

One can debate the pros and cons of artistically painting oil storage tanks without any resolution being achieved – as always, art is subjective and what’s beheld to be beautiful is purely in the eye of the beholder. As such, even functional tank painting has the power to please when photographically interpreted by someone skilled with a lens and light meter. Tanks… you’re welcome.

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

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MTA Long Island Bus Orion 05.501 Diesel #643

23 Dec

One of LIB’s old retired workhorses. This bus features the Detroit Diesel 92 series 6V92TA engine with an Allison HTB-748 transmission. Even though the decision was made years ago to convert the entire fleet to CNG, I still believe that when the MTA Bus company took the wheel that they should’ve kept some of these. ***NOTE*** This recording is owned by Trevor Logan, Jr., and is from his transit media page, WWW.TTMG.ORG. NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. As for the photo, idk where it came from my cousin downloaded it!
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
 

Sitara

23 Dec

Watch Full Length 1984 Telugu Movie Sitara directed by Vamsi, Music by Ilaiyaraaja, starring Bhanupriya, Suman & Sarath Babu. Sitara is the touching story of a village girl Kokila (Bhanu Priya) who becomes a movie star after losing her beloved. Kokila lives in a fort with her brother Chander – Sarath Babu, a bankrupt landlord who goes around courts for his property. She falls in love with Raju – Suman, a street theatre actor who comes to her village fair. Chander finds out about this romance and kills Raju and himself. Broken and distraught, Kokila flees the village and is found by Devadasu (Subhalekha Sudhakar), a photographer, on a train. She becomes a movie star and is renamed Sitara. Soon, a book is written about her life which she reveals to Devadasu. After many hurdles, she decides to give up on life herself when, in the end, Raju comes back – alive and kicking.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 

Cool Visual Art images

23 Dec

Check out these visual art images:

Artist Captures Recession Times…
visual art
Image by MyEyeSees
Tim Robinson, a free-lance illustrator, produced this drawing (copyright NYTimes) to accompany an article on January 10, 2009, in the NYTimes, Off The Charts, In the Wrong Direction.

His art has conceptual twists. I’ve blogged more on this artist. He captures stories visually and gives them a delightful and whimsical flair that stands out among the art and illustrations being used for the financial crisis. I first noticed his creative and colorful art when it appeared on the front of a Sunday Business Section with a huge illustration on April and it was the backdrop for my favorite Beringer wine in a Flickr photo Good Wine, Bad Economy.

I select this artist as one of the best capturing the difficult economy with bright graphics. Telling the story visually of our financial crisis isn’t easy. You don’t have the excitement, say, of CNN’s Anderson Cooper on the ground with Hurricane Katrina, or in the sea swimming with sharks.

Most journalists and artists are not educated in business and so for an artist to be able to capture this as an ongoing special talent is something to pay attention to.

He worked under Milton Glaser (who did the I Heart NY logo) and his clients are heavyweights.

Paying attention to how the media is covering the Financial Crisis is party of my ongoing study, which started in September. It starts with Part I: Sept. U.S. Financial Crisis and is ongoing.

This artist is worth paying attention to. His work is outstanding, as this illustration shows. Market charts have no personal component. They are dry graphs that are not humanized. Making the charts and graphs and statistical data have a life and a story isn’t easy. The utter confounding nature of this crisis, which some now call a depression (Great Depression 2.0 is what NYTimes columnnist Paul Krugman termed it only recently), will make fodder for study for years in the business curriculum of college courses. No one has nailed it; the story is unfolding.

DECONSTRUCTING THIS ILLUSTRATION:
This particular art shows the confusion of people to this crashing market, the surprise of it, the lack of understanding, the chaos and the way it has shattered our concepts. One older guy, dressed in an academic’s khaki pants and blue oxford uniform, glasses on nose, is reaching for broken pieces on the ground, stopped mid-way as if he were not sure where to even start to pick up the pieces. Another guy, in jeans, young and hip in dress, seems perplexed, already holding a bright yellow piece of the broken chart, tilted in a hopeful positive direction, as if willing the market to turn upwards. Another, in red (jail-like ) stripes, is running away holding a piece of the action, as if stealing something he shouldn’t have. The chart has broken at the bottom, but there is not an end in site. Where does the chart go from here? Is our sense of charting even relevant anymore? Has our sense of measurement been superseded by global technology? How do we interpret where we are?

This illustration almost perfectly captures the entire story of our crisis, at the moment.

The artist’s personal website is the first link at the top and his contact information is there. Tim Robinson is a hot artist to mark and watch for these wild and scary times. The NYTimes is savvy to hire him to illustrate the stories they are writing to capture the facts and make them understandable. The NYTimes has used some of the best illustrators and they are spot on in hiring Robinson to help tell their stories which are big but can be very boring.

Most people can’t understand the intricacies, nuances and economic details of the financial crisis. Our world is becoming more visual. As the NYTimes grabs more of an international market and has specialized in business news and Wall Street for a long time, how they tell this story to the world is significant.

20120510-OC-TEW-0003
visual art
Image by USDAgov
Johnny Bivera, Executive Director and Producer at Visual Media One judges the photography portion of the Art and Agriculture competition in the South Building at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), Washington D.C. Thursday, May 10, 2012. USDA photo by Tom Witham.

20120510-OC-TEW-0008
visual art
Image by USDAgov
Johnny Bivera, Executive Director and Producer at Visual Media One judges the photography portion of the Art and Agriculture competition in the South Building at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), Washington D.C. Thursday, May 10, 2012. USDA photo by Tom Witham.

 
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