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Archive for May, 2014

Eine Minute Stadt

20 May

Vor zwei Wochen sprach ich mit Robert Herrmann zufällig über seine Serie, die er „60″ slices of present“ nennt. Ich erinnerte mich an seine Bildvorstellung „Urbi et Orbi“ vom letzten Jahr und hätte nicht gedacht, dass Robert die Serie immer noch verfolgt. Ich war – ganz ehrlich – etwas baff.

So schlug ich vor, die Serie vorzustellen. Nein, nicht nur wegen der Länge des Projektes. Die Bilder lösten etwas in mir aus. Was, war mir noch unklar. So wollte ich mehr darüber wissen. War angefixt von seinen monochromen Langzeitbelichtungen.

Wer nun das Wort Langzeitbelichtungen hört (und „Urbi et Orbi“ verpasst hat), denkt vielleicht an Landschaftsaufnahmen, an milchige Wasserfälle oder Meeresbuchten. Nimmt man noch das Wort „Stadt“ dazu, stellt man sicht vielleicht langgezogene Lichtstreifen von Autos vor, die sich durch buntbeschilderte Großstädte ziehen. Robert Herrmanns „60″ slices of present“ sind alles, nur nicht das.

Langzeitaufnahme an der Millennium Bridge in London

Millennium Bridge, London, April 2013

Aufnahme vom Parliament Square in London. Im Vordergrund ein Roboter.

Parliament Square, London, April 2013

Langzeitaufnahme an der Via della Conciliazione in Rom.

Via della Conciliazione, Rom, März 2013

Blick auf das Pantheon in Rom.

Pantheon, Rom, März 2013

Blick auf die Weltzeituhr am Alexanderplatz.

Weltzeituhr, Alexanderplatz, Berlin, März 2010

Wir sehen eine Langzeitbelichtung im Görlitzer Plark.

Görlitzer Park, Berlin, Mai 2014

Langzeitaufnahme vom Karaköy Fährhafen in Istanbul.

Karaköy Fährhafen, Istanbul, März 2014

Langzeitaufnahme vom Kapali Carsi in Istanbul.

Kapali Carsi, Istanbul, März 2014

Blick auf das Pantheon in Rom.

Pantheon, Rom, März 2013

60-Sekunden-Aufnahme in der Mahmutpasa Yokusu Sokak in Istanbul.

Mahmutpasa Yokusu Sokak, Istanbul, März 2014

Langzeitbelichtung von der  Hagia Sophia in Istanbul.

Hagia Sophia, Istanbul, März 2014

Aufnahme vom Barbaros Bulvari in Istanbul.

Barbaros Bulvari, Istanbul, März 2014

Aufnahme von einer sehr bevölkterten Sabuncu Hani Sokak in Istanbul.

Sabuncu Hani Sokak, Istanbul, März 2014

Langzeitaufnahme am Denkmal für die ermordeten Juden Europas in Berlin.

Denkmal für die ermordeten Juden Europas, Berlin, September 2013

Langzeitbelichtung vom Potsdamer Platz in Berlin über die Kreuzung hinweg.

Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, September 2013

Aufnahme vom Potsdamer Platz in Berlin.

Potsdamer Platz, Berlin, September 2013

Langzeitbelichtung vom Untermainkai in Frankfurt.

Untermainkai, Frankfurt, Juli 2013

Wie breit sind die Straßen einer Stadt? Wie hoch sind ihre Gebäude im Durchschnitt? Hat die Stadt öffentliche Orte, an denen Menschen sich versammeln und gesellschaftlich interagieren können? Wie sehen diese Orte aus? Lässt sich die Stadt gut zu Fuß erschließen? Wie schaffen wir Menschen städtischen Raum und wie wirkt er sich wiederum auf unsere Lebensbedingungen und unser Verhalten aus?

Das sind Fragen, die sich Robert im Laufe der Jahre und der Arbeit am Projekt immer wieder stellte. Sie sind Indiz dafür, dass Robert etwas besitzt, das für die Umsetzung von Serien dieser Länge von grundlegender Bedeutung ist: Neugier.

Ich finde es spannend zu sehen, welche Antworten Robert in Bildform gefunden hat. Sie sind komplex und widersprüchlich, keinesfalls einfach. Jedes Bild wirkt wie ein Film und ist es doch nicht. Menschen sind zu sehen und sind es doch nicht. Die Zeit bleibt stehen und tut es doch nicht.

Wir sehen die Hasselblad an der Millenium Bridge in London

Millennium Bridge, London, April 2013

Wir sehen die Mittelformatkamera an einem Fluss.

Karaköy, Istanbul, März 2014

Die Hasselbladkamera ist auf eine Menschenmenge am Petersplatz gerichtet.

Petersplatz, Vatikan, März 2013

Des Weiteren erzählt Robert:

Mit der Zeit habe ich eine starke Hingabe für diese Arbeit entwickelt. Es bleibt ein stetig faszinierender Prozess, in dem ich meine eigene Raumwahrnehmung weiter schule und lerne zu verstehen, wie sich Menschen durch die Stadt bewegen. Mein Ziel ist es, noch weit mehr Städte zu besuchen und sie in dieser Form zu fotografieren, damit ich einen Fundus schaffe, der dann einmal spannende Vergleiche ermöglicht.

Wer sehen möchte, wie Roberts Fundus weiter wächst kann dies auf seiner Webseite mitverfolgen. Achja: Heute ist mir klar geworden, was Roberts Bilder in mir auslösten: Es ist Neugier.


kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin | Fotocommunity

 
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Walmart sues photographer’s widow

20 May

Walmart_exterior.jpg

In an article on the PPA website, the organization claims Walmart is ‘bullying’ a small Arkansas photographic studio. The Walton family wants intellectual property rights to photographs a small photography studio took of the family before Walmart grew into one of the biggest retailers in world. The defense argues the photographer’s family owns copyrights to all the images. Learn more

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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GorillaPod Focus

20 May

Nachdem mir ein befreundeter Fotograf seinen nicht ungefährlichen Stativaufbau für ein Selbstportrait zeigte, erinnerte ich mich an den Gorillapod: Ein kleines Stativ mit flexiblen Beinen, die man um Geländer, Äste und Ähnliches klammern kann.

Da ich selbst viel im Wald fotografiere und auch gern einmal aus ungewöhnlichen Perspektiven, schrieb ich kurzerhand die Firma Joby an, ob sie mir den Gorillapod kurze Zeit zum Testen zur Verfügung stellen würden.

Wenige Tage später konnte ich den GorillaPod Focus mit Kugelkopf* in Händen halten. Laut Hersteller trägt er ein Gewicht von bis zu 5 kg.

Etwas unsicher begutachtete ich das Stativ und bog die kleinen Beinchen in alle erdenklichen Richtungen. Das Verbiegen benötigte ein klein wenig mehr Kraft als ich dachte, was mich aber auch beruhigte, denn so kann es sich definitiv nicht einfach lösen, wenn es irgendwo hängt. Die helle Gummiumrandung an jedem Kugelsegment gibt dem Stativ zusätzlich noch etwas mehr Halt.

Also wagte ich meinen ersten Versuch: Ich klemmte das kleine Äffchen zunächst in der Wohnung um eine Leiter. Für ein Selbstportrait benötigte ich die Perspektive von oben. Ein idealer erster Versuch. Meine Kamera wiegt mit Objektiv etwa 1,5 kg. Es hätte für meine Testzwecke also auch locker der GorillaPod SLR-Zoom* ausgereicht, der nur bis zu 3 kg hält.

Aber ich war schon ziemlich froh, dass ich den großen Bruder nutzen durfte. Das Vertrauen zu so einem Stativ baut sich doch nur sehr langsam auf.

GorillaPod im Test auf einer LeiterPortrait, entstanden mit dem GorillaPod

Ich verdrehte also die Stativbeine um die Leiter. Das dauerte eine kleine Weile, da ich ein paar Positionen ausprobieren wollte, um die meiner Meinung nach sicherste zu nehmen. Als es dann endlich hing, war ich auch enorm froh über den Kugelkopf. Denn damit lässt sich die Kamera noch in jede Richtung schwenken und man kann die ideale Position suchen, ohne die Beine lösen und neu justieren zu müssen. Die Nutzung des Stativs ohne Kugelkopf kann ich mir nur schwer vorstellen.

Kurzum: Mein Experiment funktionierte hervorragend. Das Stativ hing bombenfest und ich fasste so viel Vertrauen, dass ich es am nächsten Tag mit in den Wald nahm. Hier nutzte ich es vor allem für unebenes Gelände, denn dafür eignet sich das Stativ auch bestens. Es muss nicht immer um etwas geklammert werden, sondern steht auch selbstständig auf seinen drei Beinen.

Allerdings ist es nur knapp 30 cm hoch und daher kein kompletter Ersatz für ein normales Stativ. Mit seinem geringen Gewicht von nur 0,5 kg ist es aber ein leichter zweiter Begleiter für unterwegs.

Mit meiner leichten Kamera konnte mich das Stativ überzeugen. Ich habe jedoch auch noch einige Rezensionen gelesen. Negativ wurde hier oft die Tragkraft angesprochen, die von einigen Testern als überschätzt bewertet wird.

Das konnte ich leider nicht voll ausreizen und so testen, da das Gewicht meiner Kamera weit unter dem Möglichen liegt. Im Zweifel würde ich mich jedoch wieder für das Modell Focus mit der größten Tragkraft entscheiden. Einfach, um sicher zu gehen.

Der GorillaPod Focus* kostet mit Kugelkopf 123 €. Mehr über das Stativ findet Ihr auf der Webseite der Firma Joby.

* Das ist ein Affiliate-Link zu Amazon. Wenn Ihr darüber etwas bestellt, erhält kwerfeldein eine kleine Provision, Ihr bezahlt aber keinen Cent mehr.


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Centr captures 360-degree video at 4K resolution

20 May

centr2.jpg

We’ve seen a few interesting panoramic camera projects over the past few months but none of them capture panoramic video. Centr, which was launched by former Apple engineers and currently in the Kickstarter stage, is aiming to fill this gap. The camera is a doughnut-shaped device that records 360-degree video at 4K resolution and 60 frames per second. Learn more

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Tribute To Fashion Designer Ruth Tarvydas

20 May

Ruth Tarvydas Tribute on Fashion Photography Blog - FashionPhotographyBlog.comThis weekend saw the mysterious passing of an Australian icon, Ruth Tarvydas. The Perth-based Lithuanian-born fashion designer had been known to produce glamorous and sexy evening dresses and special occasion gowns – quality garments that appear both sensuous and body hugging in their design.


Ruth Tarvydas Perth Fashion Show 2012 Fashion Photography Blog

She will always be remembered for accessorising her kohl eye liner and captain’s hat. Tarvydas, like her self-labelled designs, were adventurous and bold having expanded her label internationally, starting in Australia and expanding all over the globe such as Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia, the UK, France, Italy, Switzerland, Greece, Turkey, United Arab Emirates and the USA. Tarvydas was the first Australian fashion label to export overseas.

Ruth Tarvydas Perth Fashion Show 2012 Fashion Photography Blog

Her designs have also attracted the attention of celebrities in and outside of Australia, like Rihanna, Emma Watson, Kim and Khloe Kardashian, Kelly Rowland, Kim Wyatt, Dani Minogue, Melanie B & Geri Halliwell (former Spice Girls), Rebecca Finch (Miss Universe), Rebecca Twigley, Cassie Davis, Natalie Bassingthwaite, as well as pop acts such as Javine and Girls Aloud. Age was no barrier for Tarvydas, even in her 60’s she was still designing for fashion shows.

Ruth Tarvydas Perth Fashion Show 2012 Fashion Photography Blog

I wanted to take the time to write a tribute to the designer and to share my condolences to her family and friends. I won’t spend too much detailing cause of death, as there is already enough media attention going around currently to covering that information, however all I can say is that there is an investigation that is currently being undertaken but the authorities are ruling out foul play.

Ruth Tarvydas Perth Fashion Show 2012 Fashion Photography Blog

What was known was that Tarvydas was struggling with financial hardship, made known when she was forced to close her flagship store in Perth in 2012. In the press she shared that high rental rates and ongoing road works had forced her business into administration.

Ruth Tarvydas Tribute on Fashion Photography Blog - FashionPhotographyBlog.com
This raises a point in my eyes. It’s really easy to believe that the fashion industry exists in a bubble, impervious to the socio-economic landscape happening all over the world but the reality is that the very nature of the fashion industry has always been influenced by the factor of change when you think about it.

Ruth Tarvydas Perth Fashion Show 2012 Fashion Photography Blog

Each fashion era at the time from the flappers in the Roaring Twenties to the excess shoulder pads of the 1980′s were a social reflection and commentary of the political and economic environment at the time.

Ruth Tarvydas Perth Fashion Show 2012 Fashion Photography Blog

With government policies constantly changing and rental rates continue to increase for commercial properties in inner city locations, such was the case for Tarvydas, the presence of physical retail stores are on the road to decline with the street filled with vacant lots as retail store owners are forced to either close up business, relocate into the suburban areas or to jump online as e-commerce stores.

 Ruth Tarvydas Tribute on Fashion Photography Blog - FashionPhotographyBlog.com

One can witness that there is this mass exodus of businesses occurring and cannot help but wonder how this wave of businesses leaving the city centre going impact the fashion industry that have traditionally relied on stores to sell garments, let alone, how this will affect the greater economy. With the fluctuating state of local economies, even long standing iconic fashion labels like Tarvydas are susceptible to economic whims, and can stumble or even fall.

Ruth Tarvydas Perth Fashion Show 2012 Fashion Photography Blog

I want to once again dedicate this article to the late, Ruth Tarvydas, and hope that her family, friends and loved ones can find comfort during this sad time. I also want to thank Ruth Tarvydas for her contribution, support of the fashion community in Perth as well as assisting and mentoring upcoming and local fashion designers in Western Australia.

Ruth Tarvydas Perth Fashion Show 2012 Fashion Photography Blog

PHOTO CREDITS:

Picture 1: PerthNow Source: News Limited

Picture 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 10 & 11: Donna Ferreri on Style Hunter

Picture 6: supplied by ABC Source: PerthNow

Picture 9: Astrid Volzke/ The West Australian

Picture 12: Theo Fakos Source: PerthNow

Ruth Tarvydas Tribute on Fashion Photography Blog - FashionPhotographyBlog.com


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Tiny Frank Lloyd Wright-Inspired House Atop Miner’s Ruins

20 May

[ By Steph in Architecture & Houses & Residential. ]

Frank Lloyd Wright Miner's Shelter 1

Gleaming glass, oxidized steel and matte black wood contrast with the rough concrete ruins of an old miner’s shelter found in the desert near Scottsdale, Arizona. ‘Miner’s Shelter‘ was designed and built by Dave Frazee of Broken Arrow Workshop as part of the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture’s student shelter program, and is situated to take advantage of the remote natural environment.

Frank Lloyd Wright Miner's Shelter 2

Intended to serve as a rustic shelter for respite and relaxation rather than as a permanent dwelling, the off-grid structure is just large enough to accommodate a bed, sticking to the limited size of the concrete pad discovered there. The existing concrete chimney was incorporated into the design, which frames views of adjacent mountains and the Phoenix Valley.

Frank Lloyd Wright Miner's Shelter 5

The backside of the shelter is covered in oxidized steel panels that help it blend into the warm desert tones of its setting. In the distance are several similar student shelters, some still in use and some in ruins.

Frank Lloyd Wright Miner's Shelter 3

Wright spent every winter of the final two decades of his life camping in a tent-like structure in the desert before starting the tradition of building permanent, modern structures through Taliesin West, the Arizona branch of his architecture school.  The program “demonstrates how climate, building materials, site orientation, and client needs and preferences inform design choices based on the tenets of Wright’s organic architecture.”

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BUY VASOTEC NO PRESCRIPTION – No Prescription DrugStore

20 May

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Paddling Canoe through a Magic Forest

20 May
canoe paddling in fisheye lens perspective

Fish eye lens perspective when paddling through a submerged forest

I love to paddle the Lonetree Reservoir southwest of Loveland during springtime. You can always enjoy a nice view of Rocky Mountains Front Range. It is a great spot to shoot sunsets over mountains. When water is high I like to paddle through submerged trees and bushes. Please keep in mind that the heron rookery is a restricted area during the nesting season, but there are other places where you can paddle into a forest.

Picture featuring Sea Wind canoe in cottonwood forest was shot on May 15m 2014 with Canon 5D Mark II camera and Sigma 15 mm Fisheye lens. I confess … I spent a longer while gliding in a canoe between cottonwood tress and playing with that lens. I was shooting in both landscape and portrait formats.

Which version do you prefer? Horizontal or vertical?

canoe paddling in fisheye lens prespective

Let’s look at this scene in a vertical format.

Related posts:
– Canoe paddling in fisheye perspective – royalty free pictures.
– Paddling through Forest and Irrigation Ditches
– Fisheye Lens Perspective for Paddling?
– Horizontal or/and Vertical Format in Kayak Photography


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Apple Raw update adds support for Canon G1 X Mark II and Nikon D4S

20 May

shared:Aperture.png

Apple recently released Digital Camera RAW Compatibility 5.02 for Aperture 3 and iPhoto ’11. The update adds Raw image support for the following four cameras: Canon EOS Rebel T5, Canon PowerShot G1 X Mark II, Nikon D4S and Sony Cyber-shot DSC-RX10. Get the update

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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A Clip-on Camera: Capture Your Day in a Unique Way

20 May

Extra photos for bloggers: 1, 2, 3

Your day is full of fun and random moments that are, in our opinion, reality tv gold. So, where’s your film crew?

Meet the Narrative, a tiny clip-on camera to document your every day life in a much less obtrusive way.

It automatically snaps a pic every 30 seconds throughout your day and stores photos online to reminisce over later.

That cute puppy you saw in the park? Got it. That shop with the dinosaur print dress? Click. Your BFF who just spilled her iced coffee on an unsuspecting stranger? Oops.

Spend your time looking at cute things or trying to help clean up a coffee disaster and the Narrative will photograph the whole thing for you to laugh (or cringe) over later.

Capture the Moment With the Narrative
$ 229 at the Photojojo Shop


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