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Archive for February, 2014

Invisible Cities: Tweets and Photos as Terrain on a Map

20 Feb

[ By Steph in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

Invisible Cities Data Visualization 1

What would it look like if you could actually see all of the tweets and Instagram photos from a Beyonce concert in New York City hovering above the skyline in physical form? A project called ‘Invisible Cities’ answers that question with an interactive map that displays geocoded activity from various online services in real time with individual nodes appearing anytime a message or image is posted.

Invisible Cities Data Visualization 2

Using a Leap Motion controller and various hand gestures, the user navigates a three-dimensional data landscape, with all of that information literally at their fingertips. As data is aggregated, the landscape of the city changes, with new hills and valleys representing areas where social networking is the most and least active.

Invisible Cities Data Visualization 3

Invisible Cities Data Visualization 4

The individual nodes seen on the maps are connected by narrative threads based on themes emerging from the information as it comes streaming in. So, those tweets from the Beyonce concert look a bit like a stream of smoke rising out of Barclays Center in Brooklyn as users exclaim, “Jay Z and Beyonce on stage together right now OMG!”

Invisible Cities Data Visualization 5

Take a look through Central Park and you’ll see Instagram posts of people running, walking their dogs or having a picnic. Version 1.0 is now available for the Leap Motion Controller and can be downloaded for free on Airspace. The creators, Christian Marc Schmidt and Liangjie Xia, say “Through an immersive, three-dimensional information landscape, the piece creates a parallel experience to the physical environment, one of intersections, discovery, and memory.”

 

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[ By Steph in Gadgets & Geekery & Technology. ]

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19. Februar 2014

20 Feb

Ein Beitrag von: Michael Wolf

Illuminated Field © Michael Wolf


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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Off the Wall: 14 3D Graffiti Sculptures, Furniture & More

20 Feb

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

3D Graffiti Main

Flat paint on two-dimensional surfaces springs to life in surprising ways in these 14 graffiti-inspired projects ranging from sand sculptures to entire apartment buildings. Street art’s impact on visual culture expands into furniture design, architecture, art installations, 3D printed works and fantastical digital animations that envision graffiti moving through space like living organisms.

The Hive Apartment by ITN Architects

3D graffiti the hive building

Built for an architect and street artist, the facade of this Melbourne house fittingly includes built-in graffiti made from precast, four-meter-tall concrete letters spelling out ‘The Hive.’ The lettering is a load-bearing part of the building, making for a striking transition between the modern house and its old brick tailor shop neighbor.

Large-Scale Graffiti Sculptures by Zeus

3d graffiti zeus

3D graffiti art Zeus 2

London-based graffiti artist Zeus brings his art into three dimensions with a variety of large-scale sculptural works including tags that protrude from walls and cars.

Graffurniture

3d graffiti graffurniture 1

3D graffiti graffurniture 2

3D graffiti graffurniture 3

Street graffiti moves into the living room with coffee tables, side tables and chairs marrying tag style with baroque furniture traditions. Designer Luis Alicandu is a former tagger who has since turned his creative urges into a passion for industrial design.

Digital 3D Graffiti Animations

3D graffiti technica digital

These 3D graffiti creations by ‘Graffiti Technica’ are totally digital, but watch the videos to see incredible animations that bring street art to life in a novel way, cruising through the air like alien organisms.

Graffiti Analysis Series by Evan Roth

3D graffiti analysis

Here’s a totally different way of looking at making graffiti three-dimensional: a sculpture that captures a tagger’s movements as they work. Designer Evan Roth created this piece, CAP, algorithmically by motion-capturing the writing of street artist CAP in the 1983 documentary Style Wars. The piece is made of chrome-dipped ABS thermoplastic.

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Point & Click: Street Stencils Show Tourists Where to Shoot

19 Feb

[ By WebUrbanist in Global & Travel & Places. ]

shitty photo standing spot

Urban travelers love taking pictures, but ideal angles are not always obvious to visitors – many ultimately either stand in same hard-to-find spot or fail to take an interesting photograph altogether.

shitty photos shoe stencil

shitty photo stencil yellow

shitty perspective angle picture

That’s where Mimi Chan and Utsavi Jhaveri step in, spray-painting a set of shoe prints around cities. These markings in turn tell people where to place their feet, point and click to capture the ‘perfect’ (if a bit redundant) image of a given monument or sight.

shitty pic street graffiti

Starting with San Francisco and New York City, the pair found some of the project upsides included: having an excuse to wander cities (especially after dark), getting external sponsorship to cover expenses and ultimately being thanked by tourists who genuinely appreciated being told how and where to take a better picture – all that and increasingly copious press coverage, of course.

no shitty photos project

no shitty photos coverage

Overtly, the #noshittyphotos project is aimed at reducing poor photography via these cookie-cutter stencils, but of course it makes you wonder: does the world really need more photos taking from the same angle of the same thing? What is it about retaking the same shot that attracts people to documenting something over and over again? Does it help us remember or is it simply a way to lay our own small claim to having seen something?

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Getting Started in Newborn Photography

19 Feb

Newborn photography has been around in the United States for fifteen or so years, but it’s only taken hold here in the UK in the last three to four. And take hold it certainly has!

All professional photography involves a multitude of skills and newborn photography is no different, with one very important exception. It is the only area of photography that involves the photographer being completely responsible for the safety and welfare of the subject – the baby. As a newborn photographer you will hold, comfort, soothe, pose, wrap, and often even feed and clean up after your subject, even with the parents present.

Newborn photography tips 06

It is because of this difference that it is so specialized, and requires the right set of skills. Not having those skills is about more than the risk of poor images – someone’s safety is at stake.

So having decided it’s for you, you’ll have a huge number of questions. Here I aim to answer some of the biggest, and most important ones.

Newborn photography tips 02

DO I REALLY NEED TRAINING?

The short answer is yes. It doesn’t matter how skilled you are at photography, because the skills required to be safe and of a good standard as a newborn photographer are really very different than anything you have done before. If you decide to become a wedding photographer with no training, the worst that may happen is you let down a couple on their big day. As bad as that could be, no one will get hurt.

Newborns are delicate and must be handled correctly. They can suffer circulation problems, are poor at regulating their temperature, and cannot tell you when they are feeling uncomfortable, which means they are relying on you to take care of them at all times. The correct training will teach you safe handling techniques, how to spot signs of baby not being happy for many reasons, as well as general safety and other important areas.

Newborn photography tips 03

WHY DOES A SESSION TAKE SO LONG?

The average session is 3-4 hours, and you will soon realize why when you have done a couple of your own. The session is taken up by everything BUT taking photos. When I do a session my camera is in my hand for less than ten minutes the entire time. The session will involve settling, cuddling, reading baby, soothing for sleep, and gentle posing. They baby runs the show, of that there is little question, and as each baby is different, so is each session. Try to rush it and clock watch, and you’ll put yourself under huge pressure, and babies pick up on stress, which could cause you to have an unsettled baby on your hands. As a general rule, most newborn specialists will do just one session a day.

Newborn photography tips 04

WHAT IS THE BEST AGE FOR A NEWBORN SESSION?

If you have children, you may well remember that newborns sleep a lot, at least through the day, and seem able to sleep through pretty much anything too. But that changes really quickly, and by week three babies are waking more easily, and spending more time awake each day. You cannot pose a baby that is awake, so a sleeping newborn is what you need, meaning you need to aim for under two weeks, and under ten days is even better.

Sleep isn’t the only issue that dictates though. Newborns are gorgeously squishy, floppy and bendy under ten days old, which, coupled with being sound asleep, makes them perfect for gently posing into those adorable positions parents love. Much after two weeks and they begin to gain muscle tone, which means they lose the flexibility that makes such posing possible.

So that covers not doing a session too late, but you need to know why doing it too early isn’t good either. Newborns don’t usually look their best after birth, and it can take time for their faces to settle. Also, feeding needs to be established because until a baby is feeding well, he won’t sleep well. My advice would be don’t do a session under 5 days of age.

Newborn photography tips 01

HOW DO I MARKET NEWBORN PHOTOGRAPHY?

You are selling emotions. That is really the bottom line with newborns. The parents are melting with wonder and love at their new baby, and emotions are running their lives completely. If you can build a relationship with your clients that taps into their emotions, and leaves them feeling that you can truly relate to them and their baby, they will be more inclined to not only book you, but trust you.

Talk in a way that shows their baby means almost as much to you as he does them. Ask them lots of questions about their baby, and life since his arrival. New parents can talk all day about their baby, so showing he interests you will really endear you to them. Use emotive language on your site and Facebook page. Rather than saying “I like doing baby shoots” say “I simply adore capturing images of beautiful, squishy babies!”

Look after the parents when they are with you. Provide drinks and snacks, and comfortable seating. Mum will be sore and they are both likely to be exhausted.

Word of mouth is one of the best marketing tools in this genre. Mums talk, and will recommend you if they came away feeling that their baby was safe, respected and adored. The testimonials that will get you more bookings will not be the ones where mum says the pictures are good, but rather the ones where she gushes about how lovely the experience was while with you.

Newborn photography tips 05

WHAT WILL I NEED AS A BEGINNER?

Keep it simple. Training will show you the basic equipment you’ll need, like beanbag and backdrop stand, as well as a small selection of throws, hats, headbands, and wraps. The most important area for your development as a newborn photographer will be developing safe handling of the baby in your early months. The confidence in posing takes time, and that is where your focus should be, not on having all the props and the biggest selection of hats. What will set you apart as a top newborn photographer will never be the amazing set up you design – it will be how good your posing is, and how comfortable your baby looks in the images.

So in summary, I would suggest you take your time setting up as a newborn photographer. Research good training, and consider that in this area especially, you get what you pay for.

Newborn photography tips 07

For more on newborn photography and business see these articles:

  • The Ultimate Guide to Going Pro as a Photographer
  • How to Photograph Newborns
  • Newborn Photography Tips for Beginners
  • Different ways to Photograph your Baby
  • The Sensitive Side of Newborn Photography

The post Getting Started in Newborn Photography by Maddy Rogers appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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The 22 Stupidest Questions That Photographers Hate to Hear

19 Feb

The hunger for knowledge and the willingness to learn are priceless, but you may have noticed, sometimes both the reason and the aim of a question are ignorant. Sometimes questions are not asked to gain knowledge, but to show off, simply provoke you or… just for really no reason. People of many professions probably have a list of the stupidest Continue Reading

The post The 22 Stupidest Questions That Photographers Hate to Hear appeared first on Photodoto.


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Exposing another side of Sochi

19 Feb

RH110704_SP1302_Adler.jpg

Hosting the 2014 Winter Olympics, Sochi has absorbed an influx of athletes, fans and media for two weeks of competition. What isn’t apparent from the coverage is what Sochi looks most of the rest of the year – a seaside, summer resort town. Since 2007 photographer Rob Hornstra and writer Arnold van Bruggen have been documenting Sochi as they saw it change from quiet summer getaway to a world stage. Take a look at a different Sochi, as seen through Hornstra’s lens. See gallery

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Interpretieren statt repräsentieren

19 Feb

Ein Beitrag von: Chris Friel

Ich fotografiere, weil ich denke, dass es ein Teil der menschlichen Natur ist, Mitmenschen seine Umgebung vorzustellen. Die Fotografie gibt mir eine Art Befriedigung, zum Teil von den finalen Bildern, aber auch vom kontinuierlichen Lernprozess.

Mein Interesse an der Fotografie begann vor ungefähr acht Jahren. Davor war ich lange Maler gewesen und kaufte mir irgendwann eine Kamera, um meinen Ausstellungskatalog abzufotografieren.

© Chris Friel

So machte ich Bekanntschaft mit einigermaßen guten Digitalkameras, aber im Speziellen die mit Live View begeisterten mich. Seither habe ich nicht mehr gemalt. Mein Hauptziel ist es, ein Foto aufzunehmen, das mir eine Woche später immer noch gefällt. Daran arbeite ich noch.

© Chris Friel

Ein weiteres Ziel: Mehr reisen. Bisher habe ich 150 der 196 Länder der Welt besucht und suche aktuell nach einem Sponsor, der mir helfen könnte, die restlichen Länder zu bereisen. Der Prozess des Fotografierens bedeutet für mich, so lange herumzulaufen, bis ich etwas Interessantes finde.

© Chris Friel

Da ich rot-grün-farbenblind bin, waren meine frühen Fotoexperimente schwarzweiß, da ich Angst davor hatte, mit Farbfotos alles zu vermasseln. Als ich feststellte, dass die Balance der Farben für mich keine Relevanz hat, wurde ich plötzlich fähig, damit zu experimentieren.

© Chris Friel

Die Techniken, mit denen ich arbeite, dienen dem Zweck, eine Szene zum Einen zu vereinfachen, zum Anderen aber auch zu interpretieren. Von daher habe ich mit unterschiedlichen Tilt-Shift-Objektiven fotografiert, um Teile des Fotos unscharf zu machen. Eine gezielte Kamerabewegung während Langzeitaufnahmen wirkt ganz eigen und seit Kurzem beschäftige ich mich mit Mehrfachbelichtungen.

© Chris Friel

Im Großen und Ganzen soll die Technik mir dabei helfen, eine Szene zu interpretieren, statt sie nur zu repräsentieren.

Techniken, die dem Betrachter keine emotionale Reaktion entlocken, sind für mich nicht wirksam. Und die Unmengen von Langzeitbelichtungen von Meereslandschaften lassen mich kalt.

Dieser Artikel wurde von Martin Gommel aus dem Englischen ins Deutsche übersetzt.


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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17. Februar 2014

19 Feb

Ein Beitrag von: Alexander

Just-Exist-©-Alexander


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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18. Februar 2014

19 Feb

Ein Beitrag von: Steffen Fischer

© Steffen Fischer


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin

 
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