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Archive for December, 2012

Crossing The Lines: Nadia’s Story

19 Dec

For nearly two years, WDET has been exploring what unites and divides us as people and as a region in a series we call “Crossing the Lines”. While you’re watching, think about what makes YOU a Detroiter. Share your response and your story with us in the comments section below or at wdet.org Digital Director: Michelle Srbinovich Digital Producer: Matt Elliott Reporter: Rob St. Mary Assistant Digital Producer: Stephanie Zerweck Photographer/Videographer: Matt Elliott Additional Photography: Nick Hagen Special Thanks to The Dearborn Historical Museum
Video Rating: 0 / 5

Short behind the scenes video shot with a Nikon D600 in Yellowstone, USA by adventure photographers and videographers Florian and Salomon Schulz.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 

Light Painting the Stone River

19 Dec

A few nice visual art images I found:

Light Painting the Stone River
visual art
Image by rao.anirudh
Andy Goldsworthy’s "Stone River" sculpture outside the Cantor Center for Visual Arts on the Stanford campus.

Took a 7-minute exposure of the Stone River just after midnight while walking from one end of the 320 ft long sculpture to the other with a light blue LED. Took two more exposures, one for the trees and the other for the night sky and blended the three using GIMP.

100% Acrylic Art Guards by Agata Olek / Dumbo Arts Center: Art Under the Bridge Festival 2009 / 20090926.10D.54776.P1.L1.SQ / SML
visual art
Image by See-ming Lee ??? SML
See also Agata Olek talks about her 100% Acrylic Art Guards (Flickr 720p HD video)

Agata Olek (Flickr)
100% Acrylic Art Guards

"I think crochet, the way I create it, is a metaphor for the complexity and interconnectedness of our body and its systems and psychology. The connections are stronger as one fabric as opposed to separate strands, but, if you cut one, the whole thing will fall apart.

Relationships are complex and greatly vary situation to situation. They are developmental journeys of growth, and transformation. Time passes, great distances are surpassed and the fabric which individuals are composed of compiles and unravels simultaneously."

Agata Olek Biography. The SPLAT! of colors hits you in the face, often clashing so ostentatiously that it instantly tunes you into the presence of severely cheeky humor. A moment later the fatigue of labor creeps into your fingers as a coal miner’s work ethic becomes apparent. Hundreds of miles of crocheted, weaved, and often recycled materials are the fabric from which the wild and occasionally wearable structures of her fantasylands are born.

Olek was born Agata Oleksiak in Poland and graduated from Adam Mickiewicz University in Poland with a degree in cultural studies. In New York, she rediscovered her ability to crochet and since then she has started her crocheted journey/madness.

Resume sniffers may be pleased to know Olek’s work has been presented in galleries from Brooklyn to Istanbul to Venice and Brazil, featured in "The New York Times", "Fiberarts Magazine", "The Village Voice", and "Washington Post" and drags a tail of dance performance sets and costumes too numerous to mention.

Olek received the Ruth Mellon Award for Sculpture, was selected for 2005 residency program at Sculpture Space, 2009 residency in Instituto Sacatar in Brazil, and is a winner of apex art gallery commercial competition. Olek was an artist in an independent collective exhibition, "Waterways," during the 49th Venice Biennale. She was also a featured artist in "Two Continents Beyond," at the 9th International Istanbul Biennale.

Olek herself however can be found in her Greenpoint studio with a bottle of spiced Polish vodka and a hand rolled cigarette aggressively re-weaving the world as she sees.

agataolek.com
agataolek.com/blog

13th annual D.U.M.B.O. Art Under the Bridge Festival® (Sept 25 to Sept 27, 2009)
www.dumboartfestival.org/press_release.html

The three-day multi-site neighborhood-wide event is a one-of-a-kind art happening: where serendipity meets the haphazard and where the unpredictable, spontaneous and downright weird thrive. The now teenage D.U.M.B.O. Art Under the Bridge Festival® presents touchable, accessible, and interactive art, on a scale that makes it the nation’s largest urban forum for experimental art.

Art Under the Bridge is an opportunity for young artists to use any medium imaginable to create temporary projects on-the-spot everywhere and anywhere, completely transforming the Dumbo section of Brooklyn, New York, into a vibrant platform for self-expression. In addition to the 80+ projects throughout the historical post-industrial waterfront span, visitors can tour local artists’ studios or check out the indoor video_dumbo, a non-stop program of cutting-edge video art from New York City and around the world.

The Dumbo Arts Center (DAC) has been the exclusive producer of the D.U.M.B.O Art Under the Bridge Festival® since 1997. DAC is a big impact, small non-profit, that in addition to its year-round gallery exhibitions, is committed to preserving Dumbo as a site in New York City where emerging visual artists can experiment in the public domain, while having unprecedented freedom and access to normally off-limit locations.

www.dumboartscenter.org
www.dumboartfestival.org
www.video_dumbo.org

Related SML
+ SML Fine Art (Flickr Group)
+ SML Flickr Collections: Events
+ SML Flickr Sets: Art
+ SML Flickr Sets: Dumbo Arts Center: Art Under the Bridge Festival 2009
+ SML Flickr Tags: Art
+ SML Pro Blog: Art

 
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Posted in Photographs

 

Cosmos pink flowers opening time lapse

19 Dec

Time-lapse Cosmos by Neil Bromhall. This flower has been filmed to accompany the www.rightplants4me.co.uk interactive plant finder, plant identifier and pruning guide database. Filmed in studio, x1 Nikon D300 digital camera 35mm. x1 studio flash with reflector. 7-10 minutes intervals between exposures. Filmed over a period of 2 days. Music ‘Middle England’ by Debbie Wiseman
Video Rating: 5 / 5

 
 

Nikon D600 Review

19 Dec

There appears to be a move towards increasing the number of camera models with full frame (ie 24x36mm) sensors. Sony, for one, has even released a fixed mirror DSLR model with a full frame sensor.

Nikon D600.jpg

Going back to the film camera days companies just couldn’t leave 35mm alone: Kodak stupidly tried the disk camera taking 11x8mm exposures … and the pictures were woeful!

Then came the 110 format, ballooning up to a magnificent 13x17mm, producing pictures that were a little better but still suffering from a lag in photographic chemistry that continued to produce grainy images.

Earlier, we had seen the 126 format with 28x28mm images. This managed to capture a decent market share.

Another one from the same time was the half frame format (18x24mm) that attracted a decent sector of the buying public and even led to some pretty innovative camera designs, especially from Olympus.

More recently, and just prior to the emergence of digital cameras was the ill-fated APS-C format (25.1×16.7mm). IMHO this format only managed to accelerate the demise of film cameras by confusing the buying public.

So the struggle still goes on. Currently, we are surrounded by compact digital models that have sensors that range all the way down to 11mm and smaller … the size of a fingernail.

These are perfectly capable of making decent and sharp 10x15cm happy snap prints, but little larger due to the emergence of noise in the images.

If you need higher quality digital images you must head north to at least 17mm diagonal sensors or, even better, APS-C sized cameras in the guise of Sony’s NEX (23.4×15.6 mm) and Canon’s EOS-M model (22.3 x 14.9 mm). These not only offer a larger sensor but take you to interchangeable lens land.

So we eventually arrive at full frame sensor territory.

Nikon D600 side.jpg

Nikon D600 back.jpg

Nikon D600 top.jpg

With this model under review, the Nikon D600, we can enjoy full frame CMOS capture and access to Nikon’s famed range of interchangeable lenses.

But … we also get to ‘enjoy’ the pleasures of a full size camera that, when loaded with the review f3.5/24-85mm lens, tipped the scales at a (to me) significant 1.3kg. Out and about, you certainly (and passers-by) know you’re carrying a serious DSLR!

You also get to delight in the costs of full frame lenses which, when they reach the extreme wide or tele ends, tip the dollar scales to an extraordinary level.
Bougainvillea 1.JPG

Cafe and VW Kombi 1.JPG

But, if you want 35mm quality, the D600 is surely the way to go, price and design-wise.

Layout

I found the camera easy to get used to, with external controls sensibly laid out: mode dial on top left, with choice of single or multiple frame capture control made from the concentric ring beneath; at right is the shutter button, video record, exposure correction and metering area nearby. Mode dial is forward of the shutter button. The auto focus/manual button is set into the lens barrel’s left side (viewed from behind).

Front: flash operation and bracketing buttons plus one for AF mode.
At rear left are buttons for menu, choice of picture style, white button, quality/size, ISO setting.

Rear right is where the main command dial is found and the OK button, video/still selector, plus Live View and others.

D600_LCDmenuE1.jpg

Nikon D600 Features

The camera’s 24.3 megapixel CMOS captures a maximum image size of 6016×4016 pixels that can deliver a 51x34cm print made at 300 dpi.

In movies it can record excellent quality, Full HD with 1920×1080 pixels. I have to say that, on my shooting safaris, it was a delight to shoot stills alongside video clips, with the changeover between formats a very simple chore. To record video it was a simple task to tap the red button sited next to the stills shutter button. The only downer was that, while videoing, if I hit the shutter button the video record was interrupted.

In the movie which accompanies this review you may notice some unwanted artefacts, due to the dull day shooting and subsequent necessary lifting of the exposure levels and colour saturation in iMovie software.

Movie wise, uncompressed movie data can be output to an external recorder via the built-in HDMI interface.

The camera is claimed to be the ‘lightest and smallest FX-format (full frame) DSLR camera’ on the market and, if you sit it beside its peers, it certainly echoes that claim.

Smaller it may be but it’s also equipped with the same EXPEED 3 high-speed image-processing engine that’s built into the D4, D800, and D800E Nikon FX-format cameras

I found, in use, that the camera performed very well on low light and gave an outstanding performance with its AF system that tracked subjects with 39 focus points and cross-type sensors that sensed the nine most frequently used focus points at the centre of frame.

Viewing is via the delightful optical viewfinder at the top of the camera or the large 8.1cm LCD screen at rear, activated as a Live View function. I found the former to be excellent in bright light, with the LCD failing badly in the same conditions. Unfortunately, the screen can neither be tilted or swung.

There is no CompactFlash card slot but there are twin SD/SDHC/SDXC card slots; the pair can be used in overflow fashion, as sequential backup or separately set up to record JPEG in one and RAW in the other. Mighty handy!

Time lapse menu.jpg

There is a time lapse feature which is one of the options in the movie settings. The camera takes photographs at a preselected interval, with the memory card access lamp lighting up when each shot is captured. The camera then assembles the images and records them as a silent video.
Some pros may scoff but there is an inbuilt flash that has a guide number of 12m at ISO 100. Useful as a fill light.

There is a wireless connection that can download images from an Eye-Fi card or control two external flash units and even operate the camera remotely.

Nikon D600 ISO Tests

Nikon 600D ISO 100.JPG

Nikon 600D ISO 400.JPG

Nikon 600D ISO 800.JPG

Nikon 600D ISO 1600.JPG

Nikon 600D ISO 3200.JPG

Nikon 600D ISO 6400.JPG

All the way to ISO 3200 the D600 took clean shots with very little noise. Only at ISO 6400 was there some evidence of noise but sharpness still held up, making it a very useable setting.

House and flame tree.JPG

Nikon D600 Review Verdict

Quality: excellent (of course!)

Why you would buy the Nikon D600: you want full frame quality at a reasonable price and luggable weight/size.

Why you wouldn’t buy the Nikon D600: no vari-angle screen.

An impressive camera. Should sell in truckloads.

Nikon D600 Specifications

Image Sensor: 35.9×24.0mm CMOS. 24.3 million effective pixels.
Metering: Matrix, centre-weighted, averaging and spot.
Effective Sensor Size: full frame 35.9x24mm CMOS.
A/D processing: 12- or 14-bit.
Lens Mount: Nikon F.
Exposure Modes: Auto, Program AE, shutter and aperture priority, manual.
Shutter Speed: Bulb, 30 to 1/4000 second, Bulb. Flash X-sync: up to 1/200 sec.
Continuous Speed: 5.5fps in FX full frame mode.
Memory: SD/SDHC/SDXC UHS-I compliant cards. Two slots.
Image Sizes (pixels): 6016×4016 to 1968×1112. Movies: 1920×1080, 1280×720 at 24/25/30fps.
Viewfinders: Eye level pentaprism and 8.1cm LCD (921,000 pixels).
File Formats: NEF (RAW), JPEG, NEF (RAW)+JPEG, MPEG4.
Colour Space: Adobe RGB, sRGB.
ISO Sensitivity: Auto, 100 to 6400. With expansion down to ISO 50 and up to 25,600.
Interface: USB 3.0, AV, HDMI mini, DC input, external stereo mic, headphone output, remote.
Power: Rechargeable lithium ion battery, AC adaptor.
Dimensions: 141x113x82 WHDmm.
Weight: Approx. 850 g (with battery and SD card).
Price: get a price on the Nikon D600 body only or with a 24-85mm f/3.5-4.5G ED VR AF-S Nikkor Lens or with 28-300mm f/3.5-5.6G ED Nikkor Lens.

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

Nikon D600 Review


Digital Photography School

 
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Roaringly Realistic Animal Chairs by Maximo Riera

19 Dec

[ By Steph in Design & Furniture & Decor. ]

Jet black and richly detailed, Maximo Riera’s sculptural Animal Chair collection consists of an octopus, a rhinoceros, a lion, a whale, a walrus and a beetle. Crafted into dramatic seating, the animals look as if they could spring to life at any moment. The project took Riera three years to complete, working with more than thirty professionals in four different countries.

The Animal Chair collection is inspired by our connection to and impact upon the natural world. These towering sculptures serve as a powerful reminder of some of the most awe-inspiring creatures on earth.

Carved from compressed foam, which is stabilized by an internal steel frame, each chair is enveloped in real leather. And while they might not be as heavy as their living counterparts, they’re not exactly portable: the elephant chair weighs 353 pounds.

Each chair is slightly asymmetrical and carefully balanced to maintain a sense of the proportions of the animal depicted, even though only parts of their bodies are represented.


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Posted in Creativity

 

What’s in My Camera Bag?

19 Dec

Hey again, today I want to show you a bit of my photography obsession, and show you what I’m currently carrying in my camera bag. My gear choices are always changing, but for now I’ve gotten rid of all my zoom lenses and am sticking with a few lighter weight primes to free up some weight and up the image quality a bit. Of course all my gear is Nikon and has been since 1994. I’ve owned many, many Nikon lenses, cameras, and equipment over the years from the 10mm fisheye all the way up to a 400mm f/2.8 telephoto with teleconverters. I’ve even owned some Tamron, Tokina and Sigma stuff as well. At one point I looked in my bag and realised I could shoot at 50mm 7 different ways! I’m going with a simpler kit now and am relieved that I can do it with just a couple lenses and a good camera body. Thanks for watching and subscribe for more photography related content!
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
 

Girlfriend Second Chance

19 Dec

This story is a continuation from “I’d Rather Have A Dog Than A Girlfriend”. www.youtube.com Girlfriends are nice and all, but when I compare the perks between having a dog or girl friend, having a dog outshines having a girlfriend like crazy. Anyone else feel the same? BLOOPERS: youtu.be JOE’S SHIRT: justkiddingfilms.bigcartel.com GAMER CHANNEL: www.youtube.com NEWS CHANNEL: www.youtube.com WEBSITE: www.justkiddingfilms.net MERCHANDISE www.justkiddingfilms.bigcartel.com TWITTER twitter.com FACEBOOK: www.facebook.com INSTAGRAM: instagram.com TUMBLR: justkiddingfilms.tumblr.com Special Thanks To Our Friend: Julie Zhan: juliezhan.com www.youtube.com twitter.com Credits: Creative Minds- Joe Jo (@joverdose) & Bart Kwan (@bartkwan) Director- Casey Chan (@chanmanprod) Director Of Photography- Daniel Kwan (@danielkwan1) Editor- Casey Chan (@chanmanprod) Assistant Director- Geo Antoinette (@Geo_Antoinette) Producer- Geo Antoinette (@Geo_Antoinette) Sound- Geo Antoinette (@Geo_Antoinette) Behind The Scenes- Tommy Trinh (@TomTTrinh) Behind The Scenes Edited By: Casey Chan (@chanmanprod) girlfriend second chance, rather have a dog than a girlfriend, puppy love, dog, pie face, second chance, Julie zhan, dog tricks, boyfriend problems, girlfriend problems, baking, I hate my boyfriend, omg, I love my dog, lazy boyfriend, girlfriends take forever to get ready, bestiality, beauty and the beast, companionship, relationship advice, men are dogs, cute dog, justkiddingfilms, just kidding
Video Rating: 4 / 5

??? Enjoy the video? Subscribe! bit.ly ??? ???? CLICK HERE! ????? READ DESCRIPTION!! ???? A capture card failure turned into a talk show! twitch.tv The first official episode is already up, here: www.youtube.com —– Thanks for watching!! I appreciate all your support! Stay up to date! Follow us!! ? Twitter @EposVox twitter.com ? ? Twitter @Chu__ twitter.com ? ? Live Stream twitch.tv ? ? Photography & GFX d3m0l1sh3r.deviantart.com ? ? Let’s Play Together, Epos & Chu Channel youtube.com ? ? Chu’s Channel youtube.com ? —– Royalty Free Music by audiomicro.com Sound Effects by audiomicro.com —– The Bros: mVito: www.youtube.com EposVox: www.youtube.com Ditty: www.youtube.com BBK DRAGOON: www.youtube.com Mr. Random: www.youtube.com ????? SUBSCRIBE TO ALL!! ????? —– Special thanks to Catghost for doing the art for our faces! Check her out! catghost.deviantart.com midorea.com —– If you want 10% off any KontrolFreek product, be sure to use my link or promo code “EposVox”!!!! www.kontrolfreek.com Want me to do some vocal work for you? Have an indie game you’d like featured? Interested in working on some graphics, audio, etc., for me? Co-Op map suggestions? CONTACT ME at: eposvox [at] gmail [dot] com . Tweet me @EposVox —–
Video Rating: 5 / 5

 

Instagram backs away from controversial changes to terms of service

19 Dec

Istagram_logo.png

Instagram has backed away from controversial changes it planned to make to its terms of service. Co-founder Kevin Systrom has used the company blog to announce that the most sensitive phrase in the terms will be revised. The update would have given Instagram the right to sell user’s images to third parties without compensating them. Systrom says this was never the company’s intention. Instead, he says, wording will be developed to allow it to associate information such as users’ profile images with commercial postings (as Instagram’s owners, Facebook, do).

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Posted in Uncategorized

 

Kids class at Joao Crus Brazilian Jiu-Jtsu

19 Dec

Children expressing their opinion about a technique during the class at Joao Crus Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.
Video Rating: 0 / 5

 
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Posted in Nikon Videos

 

Samsung and Time Out announce contest for Londoners and New Yorkers

19 Dec

samsung_galaxycamera4g.png

Samsung and Time Out magazine have announced the ‘Share your Now’ contest. Participants can upload images they have captured of New York or London to a dedicated portal on the Time Out website. Each week, five entrants from each city will win a Samsung Galaxy Camera. When the nine-week competition closes on 4th March, Time Out will commission three winners from London, and three from New York, ‘to share their take on their own city’, using their Android OS-based camera. These final images will be featured on the front cover of region-specific Time Out magazines. The winners will also receive a free trip to the other city. A grand winner will be announced after readers vote for their favorite cover photo. The competition is open until 10 February 2013.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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