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Archive for May, 2014
Ecosystems 101: Photography is a Currency
Floating Architecture: 16 Dramatic Cantilevered Structures
[ By Steph in Architecture & Public & Institutional. ]

Jutting out over cliffs or hovering over impossibly small foundations, these 16 dramatically cantilevered structures seem like they’re about to take off into the sky. With designs that appear to defy the laws of physics, these balancing homes, museums and mountain overlooks extend beyond the usual boundaries to take in majestic views.
Balancing Barn by MVRDV


Dutch architecture firm MVRDV has made a name for itself with wholly unexpected, often gravity-defying structures, and Balancing Barn is a prime example. The glittering metal-clad building looks like someone started to push it off a cliff and gave up, seeming to balance precariously on the edge of the hillside. The structure is 98 feet long (30 meters) and is actually no barn at all, but a home designed to take in the views of the surrounding forest.
Hemeroscopium House by Ensamble Studio & Anton Garcia-Abril


A swimming pool juts out over the grass at the highly unusual Hemeroscopium House by Ensamble Studios. Made of prefabricated concrete built from three massive I-beams, two segments of an irrigation canal and two steel girders, the house took just a week to assemble.
Top of Tyrol Viewing Platform, Austria

The sculptural Top of Tyrol overlook by Aste Architecture is a platform that juts 27 feet over a ridge at the pinnacle of Austria’s Mount Isidor. The oxidized metal structure was designed to blend into the environment as much as possible, seeming to disappear into the rocks during warm weather and meld with the snow in winter.
View Hill House by Denton Corker Marshall

Rather than placing the second story parallel to the first, as is most common, Australian architects Denton Corker Marshall chose a perpendicular approach for the aptly named View Hill House. The architects envision the isolated building as ‘land art,’ a shape that can be reduced to two sticks placed on top of each other and ‘dropped’ onto the landscape.
Five Fingers Viewing Platform, Austria

Five individual platforms stick out of this overlook in the Salzkammergut area of the Austrian Alps, each with a different way to experience the view. One has a picture frame at the end, another has a glass floor, the third has a trampoline, the fourth features a round hole in the floor and the fifth offers a telescope.
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Floating Architecture 16 Dramatic Cantilevered Structures



[ By Steph in Architecture & Public & Institutional. ]
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Ecosystems 101: Forging a Sustainable Path
You would think the formula for success as a photographer (or for anything, really) would be both varied and potentially complicated. But at this point in my life, I really don't think that is true.
In fact, I think that a formula for long-term success in, let's say photography, can be boiled down to seven words:
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Strobist
Unique Flower Photography Using Multiple Exposures
Most of the new cameras from both Nikon and Canon now have the capability to create multiple exposures. The technique is rather simple to set up, but the results can be both unlimited and unpredictable. So try using this feature to create some unique floral images.

Set-up
- Select Multiple Exposure from your camera’s menu. The default option on this setting is, of course, OFF. Select the ON option. Some cameras will give you the option here for ON (series) which will keep the option on until you turn it off or ON (single photo) which will capture only one multiple exposure image.
- Scroll down to select the number of shots you desire, select either two or three. (Some cameras will allow you to select up to 10).
- The third setting is Auto Gain. When set to ON, your camera will automatically adjust exposure gain for the addition of each image. In the OFF position you must manually adjust for the exposure of each layered image. (All the sample images here were created with the Auto Gain ON.)
- Confirm that you have Multiple Exposure set to ON and hit OK.
- You’re now ready to shoot, so set up your exposure and focus like you would do with any floral image.
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Taking multiple exposure images does take some practice to perfect, and you will have a lot of throwaways. As you take each exposure, your camera will show you a preview of the image just exposed, and you have 30 seconds to shoot the next image or the camera will finish the process without any additional exposures. After the last exposure of the series, you will see the final image.
Type of Multiple Exposure Images to Try
The resulting photos you can accomplish with this technique are limited only by your own creativity. The following paragraphs describe how to shoot three types of images:
- The Twist
- The Fill
- The Shoot Through
The Twist
In this method, set the number of shots to three. The key to this method is to keep the center of the flower in the same location on all three images. Using your spot focus point as a reference point to help keep the images aligned, take the first image. Keep the center of the flower in the same location of the view finder and turn the camera to the left or right and take a second exposure. Then, again keeping the center of the flower in the same location, turn the camera again and take the third image. The degree of your turn can vary depending on the size of the subject flower. Remember to refocus before each of the three exposures.



The Fill
In this method you will fill the frame with flowers by shooting however many multiple exposures you choose and placing flowers in different locations within the frame with each exposure.

The Shoot Through
Set your number of exposures to two. Your first exposure should be a normal exposure of the floral subject. Without changing the focus setting, move your camera closer to the flower to fill the frame with an out-of-focus image, which will give you a soft shoot-through effect.


Other Tips
- Some Nikon models will automatically turn off Multiple Exposure after each image, so you will need to go back into the menu and turn it back on after each image is completed.
- Simple backgrounds work best.
- Most successful images are shot handheld. Using a tripod to create these images makes it difficult to move freely.
- LiveView will be disabled on your camera during multiple exposures.
- Remember, after your first exposure is taken, if no operations are performed within the next 30 seconds, the camera will automatically end the Multiple Exposure mode.
Creating Multiples in Photoshop
If your camera doesn’t have the Multiple Exposure options, you can still create these same effects in Photoshop.
- Take all your images as describe above as single frames. Open the first image in Photoshop.
- Open the second image and copy and paste it onto the first image as a second layer. Change the layer blending modes to multiply. You can experiment with different blending modes to get some wild effects. You can also change the opacity of each layer to get the effect to your liking.
- Repeat Step 2 for every image in the series.

Shooting multiples is a lot of experimenting, but when you get a good image, you will know it! This method can also be used for many other kinds of images. For example, try shooting a silhouette and filling it with another image. . . the possibilities are endless!
The post Unique Flower Photography Using Multiple Exposures by Bruce Wunderlich appeared first on Digital Photography School.
12 May, 2014 – The Ultimate Adventure & Workshop – The Kimberely
Luminous-Landscape has pioneered workshops into the most picturesque remote locations on the planet. Today we announce a workshop – adventure to truly an Edge Of The Planet location, the Kimberley. This is an area of northwest Australia that is so hard to get into that the best way to explore it is by boat and helicopter and we have both. Join us next April 2015 for the Ultimate Kimberley Adventure aboard the amazing True North. This will be unlike any workshop you have attended in the past. Plus you’ll have four extremely talented instructors Ken Duncan, Christian Fletcher, Mark Stothard and Kevin Raber, who have all been to the Kimberley and know the region well. This will be a charter with photographers only thus allowing us to be in position for the best light for the locations we are visiting. Learn more about this amazing workshop HERE. If there is one workshop you do, this is the one.
This July Luminous-Landscape hosts a workshop to the Northern Polar regions – Svalbard – Land Of The Polar Bear. We have only 2 berths left on the first cruise. The second cruise is Sold Out. If you’d like a very special small boat experience to this region then register today. You can find out more information HERE.
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The Luminous Landscape – What’s New
Conchita Wurst Rises Like A Phoenix
For the past couple of days, I had the song “Rise like a Phoenix” stuck in my head so I thought that I should write about the event that has just passed at the risk of embarrassing myself but revealing to the world of my guilty pleasure, that I had been following Eurovision this year. Deciding whether or not I should add my take on the music competition that stops the entire continent of Europe gluing populations across countries to their TV screens, I am going to stand my ground and say what I’ve always said, that I am always supportive of any endeavour that brings more art to this world, because the world will be a much more boring place without it.
First of all I would like to say congratulations to Austrian performer, Conchita Wurst for winning Eurovision 2014 in Copenhagen. For those of who have not followed the contest, Conchita Wurst, otherwise known by the media as “the bearded lady”, is the drag persona of singer, Thomas Neuwirth.

The journey of 25 years old, Tom Neuwirth, has been a test of trials. He first appeared on Austrian television in a singing contest show in 2006, called Starmania coming second place to Nadine Beiler. A year later, he founded a boyband, Jetzt Anders (translated as “Different Now”), which disbanded later that same year. Neuwirth returned to TV as a female drag act with a beard, in 2011 on Die große Chance (translated as “The Great Opportunity”) where she came sixth, then coming second in the Austrian preselection rounds for the 2012 Eurovision Song Contest. Second place once again, Cochita Wurst has since participated in reality TV shows such as “The Hardest Jobs of Austria” working in a fish factory, “Wild Girls” where a group of candidates had to survive the Namibian dessert amongst indigenous tribes, as well as Dancing With The Stars. It had seemed that the story so far had been one of always being the bridesmaid but never the bride.
When Wurst was announced as the Austrian representative for the 2014 Eurovision competition, you’d think that finally the performer has her break and acknowledged as an artist, however this wasn’t the case as controversy broke out with signed petitions emerged were submitted to have Wurst’s performance edited out of the competition, not to mention numerous Facebook hate pages that surfaced.

In all the interviews conducted, Wurst appears to approach these waves of confrontation in a very composed and graceful manner, having once been quoted saying “I have very thick skin. It never ceases to amaze me just how much fuss is made over a little facial hair”. Her victory in Eurovision has been seen as a milestone in tolerance and the freedom of self-expression as Wurst said during her winner’s acceptance speech “This night is dedicated to everyone who believes in a future of peace and freedom. You know who are. We are unity and we are unstoppable.”
Perhaps now, Conchita Wurst can be seen as the artist and fashion icon that she is. I suppose I resonate with her story because, long ago, I too had been bullied because I perceived the world and choose to experience the world in a different way. I am a believer in the saying “If you don’t stand for something, you’d fall for anything”.

So why have I chosen to talk about Conchita Wurst on this blog. The answer is simple. She addresses the freedom of self-expression. When it comes down to the crunch, if you look at the situation, there has been uproar from disgruntled people across the globe because a guy decided to put on a dress and wear makeup, or a drag performer is wearing a beard and somehow that means the world has turned upside down? How is that different to artists like Lady Gaga, Katy Perry or Adam Lambert, who have also been shunned for their stylistic choices?
Lady Gaga wore a dress made of raw beef to the 2010 MTV Video Music Awards. Designed by Argentine designer Franc Fernandez and styled by Nicola Formichetti, the “meat dress” was condemned by animal rights groups. Gaga explained afterward that she wore the dress as a statement about fighting for what you believe in, in response to the US military’s “don’t-ask-don’t-tell” policy.

In September 17, 2013, Katy Perry released her music video, “Dark Horse” that caused controversy across Muslim communities who condemned parts of the video, involving a man wearing pendent with Arabic wording that gets turned into sand by Perry’s character, as being sacrilegious and disrespectful. A petition containing 65,000 signatures was circulated demanding the removal of the video clip from YouTube
Adam Lambert In November, 2009, during a performance in the American Music Awards (AMA) the singer was seen gyrating his hips, walking his dancers by leash, kissing one of his band members on stage, and “flipping the bird” all while sporting his trademark guy makeup and heightened hairdo, as well as a silver spiked suit.

I have heard the opinion that perhaps these artists are just creating controversy for publicity and attention. I would ask a question though, what if they are not? What if they are just being themselves and the world is responding in a negative way because it goes against the grain of social conditioning.
I will not be going into all the politics around Wurst. I just wanted to say that it’s interesting when a male model with a full beard wears a pair of stilettos for a photo shoot or the runway is seen as edgy, whereas a man with a beard who sings on a stage in a dress and a wig is accused of tearing down the “fabric of society”. Are there people forgetting that performing on a stage in front of thousands and televised to millions around the world showing everyone who you are as an article can be a very daunting and exposing experience?

Conchita Wurst lifted herself above adversity of her critics and delivered an elegant and sultry performance of a power ballad, reminiscent of a musical score from a James Bond movie. She stood her ground, center stage, in a stunning dress and sung without the assistance of backup singers, dancers or music bands – Just her singing in front of the eyes of the world with a digital screen that’s so cool that I wished I had one behind me at all times projecting my mood.
The lyrics of “Rise Like A Phoenix”, the song she sang, contains deep a metaphorical message (open to interpretation of course) that can strike a chord with anyone facing challenges:
Rise like a phoenix
Out of the ashes
Seeking rather than vengeance
Retribution
You were warned
Once I’m transformed
Once I’m reborn
I rise up to the sky
You threw me down but
I’m gonna fly

So what’s the takeaway from all this? Well, as artists we may be confronted with choices that can sometimes go against the grain of society’s opinion, it could be a photograph that may be seen as controversial, a design on the runway deemed as risqué or even the decision to blog about a topic that has met with major backlash. How we handle these hurdles determines the outcome. Do we remain in the ashes or never give up and rise like a phoenix?
I hope you all will be able to respect that this is just an opinion.
Photo Credits To AFP, Jonathan Nackstrand, Thomas Lerch, Manfred Baumann & OFP.
Seene 3D photo app makers preview 360-degree scanning
Seene is a free app for iOS that lets you capture and share interactive and three dimensional images, just like Instagram and Vine do for 2D-images and videos respectively. The makers of the app, Obvious Engineering, are now showing off a preview of a forthcoming feature. Soon Seene will be capable of capturing a full 360-degree model of an object and export it for printing on a 3D-printer. Learn more
News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)
The Power Purse:A Phone Charging Wallet
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Who doesn’t love an afternoon snooze, tucked in tight to recharge for the day?
Give your phone the luxury of a midday power nap with the Power Purse, a wrist wallet with a built-in battery to give energy to tired phones on-the-go.
Keep your phone from getting grumpy and losing energy while you’re happily taking pics all day long.
Not only is this wallet full of power, it’s got plenty of room for cash, cards and phonography gear! Carry everything you need in one stylish package.
Power Up with the Power Purse
$ 49 at the Photojojo Shop
© laurel for Photojojo, 2014. |
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