RSS
 

Archive for July, 2015

Scary Skylodge: Geometric Glass Hotel Pod Clings to a Cliff

09 Jul

[ By Steph in Destinations & Sights & Travel. ]

skylodge 1

Clinging to a craggy cliff like an oversized artificial barnacle, this pod is only accessible to those willing to scale the 400-foot rock face from the base of a Peruvian mountain. If you’re brave and hardy enough to pull off that feat, you’ll probably do just fine taking up residence in a hotel room that the rest of us will only ever have nightmares about. In addition to its precarious location, the Natura Vive Skylodge is completely transparent, so you can’t exactly forget that you’re hundreds of feet in the air while inside.

skylodge 2

skylodge 5

As fragile as they look, these three pods are made of aerospace aluminum and weather-resistant polycarbonate, so they’re not likely to be blown down or punctured in a storm. At 25 feet long and 8 feet wide, each one is spacious enough to accommodate eight guests, offering comfortable beds, a dining room and even a private bathroom.

skylodge 4

 

The journey to the pod is actually safer than it looks, as climbers can be tied to a steel cable as they traverse the trails, with ladders and bridges helping them to the top. This zipline route offers alternate access for those who aren’t experienced enough to make the climb. You can even hook yourself to the cables as you perch on a wooden observation deck positioned atop each pod, looking out over the valley.

 

skylodge 6

Solar panels capture energy to power four interior lamps and a reading light, and the ‘sink’ and toilet are dry. The roughly $ 300-per-person-per-night fee includes transportation to and from your hotel, guides, equipment, snacks, a gourmet dinner with a bottle of wine and an al fresco breakfast.

Share on Facebook





[ By Steph in Destinations & Sights & Travel. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Scary Skylodge: Geometric Glass Hotel Pod Clings to a Cliff

Posted in Creativity

 

Bilder der Entfremdung von Wolfram Hahn

09 Jul

Ein Kind schaut Fernsehen.

Wolfram Hahn ist ein in Berlin lebender Fotograf, dessen Arbeiten soziologische Studien über den modernen Menschen sind. Er beschäftigt sich unter anderem mit der Bedeutung neuer Medien für Menschen. Ihn interessiert, ob sich die Art und Weise, wie wir miteinander in Kontakt treten, verändert hat.
kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin | Fotocommunity

 
Comments Off on Bilder der Entfremdung von Wolfram Hahn

Posted in Equipment

 

Canon PIXMA MG3620 can print photos directly from social networks

09 Jul

Canon has introduced a new printer that can print images directly from Instagram and other social networks. The PIXMA MG3620 Wireless Inkjet all-in-one printer works with the Canon PRINT app for iOS and Android to both access and print from Instagram accounts, as well as other online services like Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, OneDrive, Evernote, Google Drive, Photobucket, and Dropbox. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Canon PIXMA MG3620 can print photos directly from social networks

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Panasonic looks to reassure G7 owners with rubbed-off serial numbers

09 Jul

Panasonic USA has issued a statement in response to concerns on the DPReview.com forum about Lumix G7 serial numbers rubbing off. The statement aims to reassure customers, pointing out that the problem does not indicate that the cameras are not genuine and confirming that camera warranties are still valid, so long as you retain proof of purchase and the label from the camera box that states the serial number. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Panasonic looks to reassure G7 owners with rubbed-off serial numbers

Posted in Uncategorized

 

The Essence of a Great Portrait

09 Jul

If you find portrait photography difficult, then you’re not alone. Interacting with another person at the same time as using a complex camera, and combining the two activities to make a pleasing image isn’t easy. There’s a lot to think about, even if you’re already familiar with your camera and have put in some good preparation time.

DSCF0048

Aside from the lighting, the background, the composition, the pose and the expression, there is also the question of what even makes a pleasing image. Will the subject like the way they look, which is their best side, is their hair perfect, what’s the best angle to shoot from for their particular shape of face? Your subject might have other things to do, a meeting to go to or kids that need to be picked up from school. Landscapes usually tend to be more patient models.

A great portrait isn’t all about making somebody look beautiful though. You could photograph the most immaculate, styled, posed model in a wonderful location in beautiful light, but it wouldn’t necessarily make a good portrait if it doesn’t tell the viewer anything. People aren’t perfect, and a portrait should be more about leading towards an element of truth, more about the person being photographed.

DSCF9654

As photographers, we are in some ways, freed by our limitations. We can only only capture moments, glimpses. A single expression can never tell the whole story of a person in all their complexity, so we are free from the obligation of trying to do so. But it can hint at who a person is in reality. It can suggest a story, and it’s those subtle hints and suggestions that can make a portrait more intriguing.

It can help if you know the person, or at least a little about them. It helps not only in thinking about what you might want to show in the photograph, but also in your interaction with them. If you know something about their interests, their views, their hobbies, what’s going on in their lives at the moment, you’re more likely to be able to understand their perspective. You might aim to help them relax, or discuss a passion of theirs that might stir an emotion that animates their features.

DSCF9903

Here are three other exercises you can try:

1. Use your camera screen rather than the viewfinder. Sometimes the camera inevitably gets in the way. Holding a box in front of your face isn’t the best way to interact with someone, so try a different way. Keep the camera ready, glance at the screen for composition, but watch your subject and their expressions and reactions, watch for the moment you want to capture.

DSCF3931

2. Distract your subject. Not many people are immediately comfortable being photographed. It’s difficult to ignore a camera being pointed at you, so sometimes a distraction can help. You could try providing another point of focus, suggesting something else to look at or think about. A prop can work well too, especially if it’s in keeping with the portrait. An object of some sort to take attention away from the camera.

3. Wait. Sometimes we try too hard to make something happen, and instead of going searching we have to let it come to us. Wait for a few moments and see what happens. Something will change,a pose, an expression, and you might be more pleased with the results.

DSCF4682

There is no formula for a great portrait, other than patience, practice, determination, and probably a slice of good fortune too. But there are also a whole lot of very good, honest, storytelling, memorable and joyful portraits to be made along the way. Remember that you’re making a portrait of a person, and people have imperfections. Some of the greatest portraits have even looked awkward or uncomfortable; not to attempt to demean or embarrass, but to be real. People that program electronic drum machines include tiny imperfections in the rhythms they create because they sound more natural, more pleasing to the ear, more like real drummers. You might try to make the perfect portrait but it’s likely that it’s exactly the imperfections that might make it great.

googletag.cmd.push(function() {
tablet_slots.push( googletag.defineSlot( “/1005424/_dPSv4_tab-all-article-bottom_(300×250)”, [300, 250], “pb-ad-78623” ).addService( googletag.pubads() ) ); } );

googletag.cmd.push(function() {
mobile_slots.push( googletag.defineSlot( “/1005424/_dPSv4_mob-all-article-bottom_(300×250)”, [300, 250], “pb-ad-78158” ).addService( googletag.pubads() ) ); } );

The post The Essence of a Great Portrait by Alastair Arthur appeared first on Digital Photography School.


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on The Essence of a Great Portrait

Posted in Photography

 

Lensbaby launches Creative Mobile Kit

09 Jul

Lensbaby has launched the Creative Mobile Kit, consisting of a mounting device and kickstand for your smartphone, and two lenses, the LM-20 and LM-30. The former captures a large sweet spot surrounded by gradually increasing blur, and the latter produces images with a sharp center surrounded by reflections. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Lensbaby launches Creative Mobile Kit

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Snarkitecture: 9 Fun Installations & Pop Up Shop Designs

09 Jul

[ By Steph in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

snarkitecture main

If you’re a fully-grown adult wishing you could still dive into ball pits or play with marble runs, design duo Snarkitecture makes it possible and cool to do so with their stark, surreal all-white installations. You’re not being immature, you’re taking part in an artistic process! The Brooklyn-based artists are best known for experimental environments investigating the unknown within architecture, often making use of unexpected materials like inflatable tubes and stiff white foam. Here are 9 of their most playful projects.

Ball Pit

snarkitecture ball pit 1

snarkitecture ball pit 2

snarkitecture ball pit 3

snarkitecture ball pit 4

The National Building Museum in Washington D.C. has been transformed into a ‘beach’ with the addition of nearly 1 million recyclable translucent plastic balls. Visitors are invited to dive into the 10,000-square-foot installation, which “encourages exploration and interaction with one’s surroundings, and offers an unexpected and memorable landscape for visitors to relax and socialize within.” White beach chairs and umbrellas line the ‘shore,’ offering a vantage point from which to observe adults frolicking like 5-year-olds in a McDonald’s playground. The installation will remain in place until September 7th, 2015.

Dig

snarkitecture dig 4

snarkitecture dig 3

snarkitecture dig 1

snarkitecture dig 2

Armed with helmets, chisels and pick axes, Snarkitecture dug their way through a solid block of architectural foam from inside the Storefront for Art and Architecture at the entrance of the Design Miami Pavilion in 2012. A combination of installation art and performance, the project had visitors watching the designer duo as they excavated a network of tunnels and inhabited them for a month in a sort of human ant farm. “Dig was an experiment between the precision of the architectural plan and the looseness of the unknown,” say the designers. “The installation and performance explored the intersection of primitivism and contemporary architecture; the complexity of the final surfaces and form suggested a digital origin and concealed the simplicity of a space made entirely by hand.”

Parking Garage Air Ball

snarkitecture air ball 1

snarkitecture air ball 2

snarkitecture airball 3

1111 Lincoln Road, an ultramodern parking garage by Swiss architecture firm Herzog de Meuron, became the setting for a high-design game of airball with an installation by Snarkitecture and fashion retailer Alchemist. Titled AIRBALL, the interactive installation is “a custom environment designed by Snarkitecture that draws on familiar objects and materials from the visual and spatial world of basketball, while interpreting them through a unique and creative lens.” Visitors to the all-white arena located on level 5 of the car park could compete side-by-side while looking out over the Miami skyline.

Cave

snarkitecture cave

snarkitecture cave 2

snarkitecture cave 3

 

COS stores collaborated with Snarkitecture to create a surreal cavern sculpted from thousands of paper-thin fabric sheets at Milan Design Week. Hung from the ceiling at various heights, the strips create a luminescent chamber echoing the aesthetics of the fashion brand’s Spring/Summer 2015 collection, drawing visitors in from street level and transporting them to an intimate showroom. Navigating the small hollows within the dangling fabric was a sort of adventure, a pause between the chaos of the external world and the soothing retail space. 

Drift

snarkitecture drift 1

snarkitecture drift 2

snarkitecture drift 3

Hundreds of sausage-like inflatable tubes were sandwiched within a light metal frame to create an undulating temporary space for Snarkitecture’s ‘Drift’ pavilion at Design Miami 2012. Echoing the materials used for the tent itself, the vinyl tubes dripped down from overhead like man-made stalactites to create an interactive and contemplative environment filled with filtered light and punctuated with occasional views of the Miami sky. “The rising landscape becomes a beacon for visitors approaching Design Miami/ while the excavated cavern presents a moment of exploration before entering the fair.”

Next Page – Click Below to Read More:
Snarkitecture 9 Fun Installations Pop Up Shop Designs

Share on Facebook





[ By Steph in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Snarkitecture: 9 Fun Installations & Pop Up Shop Designs

Posted in Creativity

 

Meet PJ:Taylor Edition

09 Jul

Name: Taylor “Sweet T” Meredith

What Do You Do Here? I have way too much fun writing articles every week for the Photojojo blog.

Favorite Camera: Whatever I’ve got in my hand! Currently a Nikon D40x.

Learn Even More About Taylor
(…)
Read the rest of Meet PJ:
Taylor Edition (141 words)


© Taylor for Photojojo, 2015. |
Permalink |
No comment |
Add to
Taylor Edition”>del.icio.us

Post tags:


Photojojo

 
Comments Off on Meet PJ:Taylor Edition

Posted in Equipment

 

7. Juli 2015

08 Jul

Das Bild des Tages von: Maria Louceiro

19221318408 © Maria Louceiro

Im Ausblick: Wie man mit Kritik umgeht, eine mobile Dunkelkammer und Tränen.
kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin | Fotocommunity

 
Comments Off on 7. Juli 2015

Posted in Equipment

 

8. Juli 2015

08 Jul

Das Bild des Tages von: Andy Schwetz

Dunkles Zimmer voller Spinnenweben.

Im Ausblick: Alevitische Bewohner in Dersim, ein myteriöses Auto und ein Roadtrip.
kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin | Fotocommunity

 
Comments Off on 8. Juli 2015

Posted in Equipment