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Archive for December, 2012

Nice Visual Art photos

11 Dec

Check out these visual art images:

I’m Ready
visual art
Image by Peter Alfred Hess
Model: Lee Weinstein

Assignment for Visual Studies 186B, an art photography course taught at UC Berkeley

Betti Richard, American sculptor, born 1916, in her studio
visual art
Image by Smithsonian Institution
Description: Betti Richard Matsch was a student of the Art Students League, an important art school in New York City. She preferred to work in bronze and created very expressive figure works.

Creator/Photographer: Peter A. Juley & Son

Medium: Black and white photographic print

Dimensions: 8 in x 10 in

Culture: American

Persistent URL: http://photography.si.edu/SearchImage.aspx?id=5812

Repository: Smithsonian American Art Museum, Photograph Archives

Collection: Peter A. Juley & Son Collection – The Peter A. Juley & Son Collection is comprised of 127,000 black-and-white photographic negatives documenting the works of more than 11,000 American artists. Throughout its long history, from 1896 to 1975, the Juley firm served as the largest and most respected fine arts photography firm in New York. The Juley Collection, acquired by the Smithsonian American Art Museum in 1975, constitutes a unique visual record of American art sometimes providing the only photographic documentation of altered, damaged, or lost works. Included in the collection are over 4,700 photographic portraits of artists.

Accession number: J0033500

Art defector
visual art
Image by Pulpolux !!!

 
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Posted in Photographs

 

How To – Shoot Time Lapse of the Milky Way – Part 1

11 Dec

In part one of this video series I explain what equipment you need and camera settings are used to get great shots of the Milky Way. The toughest part for most people will be to get out to an area that is dark enough to see the Milky Way. The second part will deal will taking the photos and converting them into a video so please subscribe! Sorry for the poor audio quality, I am getting a mic to improve my videography skills especially in the audio department.

 
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Posted in Nikon Videos

 

“Triangle Walks” by Fever Ray

11 Dec

This unofficial video clip is our own interpretation of “Triangle Walks”, a great song by Fever Ray. It was done thanks to a creative collaboration between Pablo Calvillo, Cara Elizabeth, Angel Rizonyk and Pierre Relange. You can download a high res version from my website: pablo.maliarts.net
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
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Mundane Music: The Sonification of Everyday Things

11 Dec

[ By Steph in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

Exploring the world through sound is not limited to simply listening to the audio that’s automatically produced by the people, nature and objects that surround us each day. For designer Dennis P. Paul, anything can produce its own strange music – including Legos, crumpled paper and clown heads. Paul created a device that scans the surfaces of 3D objects and translates them into audible frequencies.

In a sort of reverse of Realität’s ‘Microsonic Landscapes’, which used a 3D printer to turn albums into physical objects, ‘An Instrument for the Sonification of Everyday Things’ translates the size and shape of various items into sound waves.

A laser scans the surface of the object and sends that information through a sound processor. The more convoluted the object is, the more complex and chaotic the music. It took Paul approximately three weeks to build the instrument, which consists of aluminum tubes, black acrylic, a stepper motor, a high-precision distance-measuring laser and “a few bits and bobs.”

“I was a Lego kid, printed my own t-shirts, bought a computer at the age of 10 and started to program it to make music and graphics. If you sum this all up, it is pretty much what I do today: I’m a designer/artist with a geek streak!”


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[ By Steph in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

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Posted in Creativity

 

10. Dezember 2012

11 Dec

Ein Beitrag von: Daniel Ernst


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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Posted in Equipment

 

The Jungle Giants – She’s a Riot (OFFICIAL)

11 Dec

Buy the single here: itunes.apple.com Filmed in one room using only one shot, this video plays with space, position and continuity without the aid of any editing or post production. All the changes you see, if you can spot them, happened in real time. Directed by Anthony Salsone Director of Photography: Kurt Riddell 1st AC: Lachlan Hughes 2nd AC: Rohan McHugh Makeup Artist: Milana Cryer Production Company: Room 6
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Buy the new album Coexist: thexx.info Get the lyrics to Angels here: bit.ly Angels is taken from The xx’s new album Coexist, out now on Young Turks. Photography by Davy Evans. thexx.info http

 
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Posted in Photography Videos

 

Rock Crawler playing around at Stillwell

11 Dec

302 Ford, propane, 44s, D60, Corp 14, Stak T-case

#5326/5328/5335 |SUBSCRIBE/RATE VIDEO TOO =)! MABSTOA GUN HILL BUS Aftermath of the 2010 Blizzard in EAST TREMONT, THE BRONX ENJOY! Video Taken: Dec 28, 2010

 
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Posted in Nikon Videos

 

Cool Visual Art images

11 Dec

A few nice visual art images I found:

Fractal shadows…
visual art
Image by Benjamin Pender
Cut out myriad triangles out of my "visual journal" on 5 pages, each page with another iteration of the fractal.

0st page – Cut 1 trangle, result 1 triangle
1nd Page -Cut 3 triangles (resulting in 5)
2rd Page – Cut 9 trianges (resulting in 14)
3th page – Cut 27 triangles (resulting in 41)
4th page – Cut 81trianges (resulting in 122)

Equation 3^n =Cut

Also, I noticed that if you add the result of the previous page with the current "cut" number, you get the result of the current page…

Kyoto Ryoanji 2 – Coin Shaped Shrine Fountain
visual art
Image by jondresner
This is a visual pun: the square hole actually serves as a radical for all four kanji.
Top: 5, which combines with mouth to mean "myself"
Left: arrow, which combines with mouth to mean "knowledge"
Right: Beautiful/good, which combines with mouth to mean "only" or "merely"
Bottom: Doesn’t mean anything by itself, though it could be read as "leg" which combines with mouth to read "foot"

I don’t think there’s a hidden phrase there, but I could be wrong.

 
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Posted in Photographs

 

Delete Images?? NEVER!!

11 Dec

Recently, Russel Masters wrote that deleting images was good for you.  While I agree there is a reason to delete some images- those clearly out of focus, poorly exposed, or with fatal composition flaws, I’m not a fan of wholesale deletion of images from a set.  This rule applies to portraits, landscapes, and anything else I shoot.

Sand Harbor

This image of Sand Harbor at Lake Tahoe, Nevada, languished on a hard drive for 3 years before I got around to editing it. It wasn't even in the folder I designated for the "keepers" I shot that day. The technical details: ISO 100, 1/25, f/16. EOS 5D Mark II with EF 14mm f/2.8L II.

Here’s the deal.  I go through all of my images and immediately begin processing the ones that immediately strike me as being worthy.  Eventually I get through those, and then tend to walk away.  At this point, it seems Mr. Masters is content to keep the ones he’s deemed as “keepers” and deleting everything else in the name of hard disk space.

I emphatically disagree with this philosophy.  First off, disk space in this day and age is relatively cheap. A 1TB external hard drive can be had for less than $ 100USD. I try to maintain redundancy with regards to hard drives, keeping two identical drives to store the files.  One is my working copy, while the other is simply a backup of RAW files, moved offsite to my office for safe keeping.

Second, and more importantly, sometimes the emotion from the shoot gets in the way.   Several times, I’ve come home from a trip or a shoot and immediately worked on the images that struck me as keepers as soon as I shot them.  And those images still strike me as keepers, even years later. But I’ve had several times where I went back through images years after the originals were shot, and found gems that for whatever reason I didn’t even mark as a potential keeper.

The above shot of Sand Harbor, Lake Tahoe is one example.  I shot this image, along with others that day, in 2009. I had several nice sunset shots and dusk shots that really popped for me. This shot was taken as I waited for the light to get more dramatic, and then was apparently forgotten in the heat of the moment as other images jumped ahead of it in my mind.  Fast forward to 2012.  I was going through old images on this hard drive, just basically looking for images I hadn’t yet processed and might want to.  I was bored and was looking for something to do.  I went through the images shot that evening and saw this one and wondered what I had been thinking in not processing the file.  Truth be told, it was a lot easier to process than some of the images I immediately worked on.  I simply tweaked the saturation and contrast and was done. Posted it to my website minutes after I completed the processing.  Within two hours, I sold a 20×30 print on acrylic for $ 225USD. Well worth the time and effort to edit.

Boston Skyline

This is another image, taken the same month as the Lake Tahoe shot. This was an exceptional shooting day for me. I went into Boston in search of this spot, found parking, and was thrilled to see all the sailboats on the Charles River, making for an excellent foreground. I used every lens in my bag this day, getting salable shots with each- everything from a 14mm f/2.8 to the 70-200 f2.8L IS. This shot was taken with the EF 24-105 f/4L IS, at 47mm. But due to the number of good shots captured that day, I just ignored it as being too blah. Since I finally edited it, it has sold 5 times!.

Another such image is this one, of the Boston skyline. I’d shot this image in August 2009 as well. I’d had several shots I absolutely loved from this set.  For some reason, I find some of my best selling images are from in and around Boston.  I had decided to see what else I hadn’t posted to my website to see if I had anything worth posting that I thought might sell.  This image was one.   It’s less dramatic than some of the keepers I immediately edited that day.  In fact, it’s a fairly standard shot. But I had a great sky and good light that evening.  I felt it was worth working this image and posting it.  I’m glad I did.  In the 3 months since it was posted, the image has sold 5 times! Between the two images, I’ve made enough to purchase five 1TB hard drives- making Mr. Master’s argument about saving disk space moot.

This shot was instantly deemed a keeper in my eyes, and edited immediately. I loved the effect the 14mm lens had on the clouds, and the interest added by the sailboats in the foreground. I had deemed the other shot, Boston Skyline, a bit too blah at the time of the initial edit. Three years later, I edited it, and within a few months has become one my best selling images.

The bottom line is, I would be VERY careful of what I delete in terms of images.  Yes, get rid of those clearly flawed images. But the rest, even the ones that don’t strike you as worth processing?  Give them some time to age.  You may find they are a fine wine just waiting to be uncorked.

 

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

Delete Images?? NEVER!!


Digital Photography School

 
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11 December, 2012 – What We See and How We Photograph It

11 Dec

The science of human vision and photographic optics have always fascinated. Today, Charles S. Johnson Jr. provides us with an exclusive essay titled What We See, And How We Photograph It. I hope that you enjoy reading it as much as I have. 

Kevin Raber has written to say that he has just completed the latest PODAS workshop, this time in New Zealand. Looks like everyone had a great time. Kevin’s PODAS Blog is found here.

I will be one of the instructors on Phase One’s Western Australia PODAS this June, and can hardly wait.

Many of you who knew I was unwell over the past six month have written with you best wishes, and I want you to know how much that has meant to me.

I have updated On a Personal Note, just to say that I am now out of chemo and regaining my strength. We’re off to our place in Mexico soon and greatly looking forward to the warmth and charm of living in San Miguel.


The Luminous Landscape – What’s New

 
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