RSS
 

Archive for August, 2015

Weekly Photography Challenge – Fish

29 Aug

Photographing seemingly unattractive objects like fish can be difficult – or maybe just a challenge.

EPi.Longo

By ePi.Longo

Weekly Photography Challenge – Fish

A hard photo subject can help you grow as a photographer, push you out of your comfort zone. So now’s a great time to practice. Find a fish (at the market, store, dead or alive – whatever you can come up with) and try photographing it to make a compelling image.

J J

By J J

Jason Mrachina

By Jason Mrachina

Zoe

By Zoe

Share your images below:

Simply upload your shot into the comment field (look for the little camera icon in the Disqus comments section) and they’ll get embedded for us all to see or if you’d prefer upload them to your favourite photo sharing site and leave the link to them. Show me your best images in this week’s challenge. Sometimes it takes a while for an image to appear so be patient and try not to post the same image twice.

Matt

By Matt

Jacob  Spinks

By Jacob Spinks

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 Weekly Photography Challenge – Fish by Darlene Hildebrandt appeared first on Digital Photography School.


Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on Weekly Photography Challenge – Fish

Posted in Photography

 

Fujifilm firmware updates add Windows 10 support to 7 cameras

29 Aug

Fujifilm has released firmware updates for seven of its X-series cameras, providing them with support for Microsoft’s Windows 10. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Fujifilm firmware updates add Windows 10 support to 7 cameras

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Pink Marble Public Pissoir: Open-Air Urinal in Urban Zurich

28 Aug

[ By Steph in Architecture & Public & Institutional. ]

sculptural urinal 2

This giant hunk of pink marble in the middle of a Zurich car park isn’t a sculpture, exactly; it’s a place to relieve yourself in the open air so you don’t go stinking up the city. So-called ‘pissoirs’ can be found all over Europe, ranging from ornate Victorian designs resembling gazebos to portable plastic contraptions to cylindrical urinals that actually retract into the ground. Portuguese architecture firm Bureau A’s version, standing in the middle of a parking lot, looks like modern art.

sculptural urinal 1

sculptural urinal 5

From the rose tint of the high-end marble imported from Lisbon to the LED light advertising its presence after dark, this thing doesn’t look anything like what most of us would identify as a urinal. “In the form of a noble fountain, a classical figure of occidental culture, Lisbon sends a solid salute to rich Zurich,” say the designers.

sculptural urinal 4

sculptural urinal 3

Indeed, streams of water pour down the marble faces to whisk away foul-smelling excretions, which pour from a spout directly into a pothole planted with pebbles and grasses. The classically-influenced design pays tribute to adjacent historical attractions and acknowledges the fact that such facilities are required in order to keep the city clean.

urinals for women 2 urinals for women

Of course, there’s one big problem with such pissoirs, even fancy ones like this: they’re only for men. While Copenhagen studio UiWE designed some efficient-looking urinals for women (pictured above), they’ve yet to catch on in any real way, forcing anyone who can’t use a conventional urinal to mad dash it around the city looking for accessible restrooms when they have to go.

Share on Facebook





[ By Steph in Architecture & Public & Institutional. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Pink Marble Public Pissoir: Open-Air Urinal in Urban Zurich

Posted in Creativity

 

The new Canon 35L II will be a thing of beauty

28 Aug

Canon recently announced an update to the wildly popular 35mm F1.4L lens, originally released in 1998 and undoubtedly designed back in the day for film. The original was always a favorite of our technical editor Rishi Sanyal, so join him as he takes a stroll down memory lane and recounts his favorite aspects of that lens, and what he looks forward to in the update. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on The new Canon 35L II will be a thing of beauty

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Raus aus dem Kreatief! Teil 2

28 Aug

Abstrakte Landschaft aus Gelb und Violett.

Im letzten Monat haben wir die Aktion „Raus aus dem Kreatief“ gestartet, die Euch Anregungen gibt, fotografisch neue Ansätze zu entdecken, die eigenen Arbeiten zu reflektieren und mit Techniken im Spannungsfeld zwischen Zufall und Selbsterkenntnis den eigenen Stil zu verfeinern – oder auch umzuwerfen und neu anzusetzen.
kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin | Fotocommunity

 
Comments Off on Raus aus dem Kreatief! Teil 2

Posted in Equipment

 

Future of Fenestration: Every Window Will Generate Solar Power

28 Aug

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Fixtures & Interiors. ]

solar power windows

Better, cheaper and easier than solar windows, this newly-patented flexible coating can be applied to existing glass and plastic surfaces, turning any aperture into a source of electricity. With this technology on all of its surfaces, buildings can generate up to 50 times more solar energy per structure.

solar energy polymer

Developed by SolarWindow Technologies, this inexpensive approach has a payback time of as little as one year (far less than the 5 to 10 years of traditional solar approaches. As the technology evolves and expands, it is only a matter of time until every window draws energy from light.

solar generation panel transparent

By adding it to the inside surface of a window, the process protects the tech from exterior sources of damage and simplifies application. The solution is also lightweight and adaptable, making it easier to retrofit existing architecture without cost-intensive shipping or labor-intensive installation processes.

solar sheet making process

These sensitive photovoltaics can draw power from lunar energy and artificial lights in addition to the sun’s rays. Their relatively low price per unit reinforces the sensibility of simply putting them on all sides of a structure, including those with less natural light.

solar window tech

Effectively invisible wires draw electricity from the exposed surfaces while a uniform and architecturally-neutral color tinting process allows for a variety of of looks and degrees of transparency.

solar light neutral color

This new substance can be deployed as a sticky film on a surface or potentially even painted on as a liquid. The organic (but secretive) constituent source materials of the core polymer include common elements such as carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen.

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Fixtures & Interiors. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on Future of Fenestration: Every Window Will Generate Solar Power

Posted in Creativity

 

Edelkrone introduces QuickReleaseONE, a universal quick release adapter

28 Aug

Edelkrone has introduced its QuickReleaseONE, a device the company says is the first universal quick release on the market. The QuickReleaseONE screws into the tripod mount on the bottom of a camera, and attaches to the 1/4″-20 screw on any tripod plate. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Edelkrone introduces QuickReleaseONE, a universal quick release adapter

Posted in Uncategorized

 

City Lab: World’s Largest Urban Simulator Spans 26 Square Miles

28 Aug

[ By WebUrbanist in Architecture & Cities & Urbanism. ]

city lab new mexico

It will be a brand-new, from-scratch American city like any other, with urban, suburban, exurban and rural zones dotted with houses, malls, power plants, police and fire stations, missing only one key ingredient: inhabitants. Currently under construction in the New Mexico desert, the Center for Innovation, Testing, and Evaluation (CITE) is a sort of real-life Sim City, the “first of its kind, in scale and scope,” a unique “fully integrated test, evaluation and certification facility dedicated to enabling and facilitating the commercialization of new and emerging technologies.”

city lab deserted complex

Known informally as City Lab (click to enlarge the diagram above), the 26-square-mile urban laboratory complex has a billion-dollar budget and will host all kinds of tests, including but not limited to: intelligent transportation systems, smart grid technologies and green energy strategies. Wired for data collection and replete with tunnels, system-wide scenarios can be monitored in the minutest detail, a dystopian twist on what might otherwise seem an idyllic mid-sized city capable of supporting 35,000 citizens.

citylabmasterplan

Complete with all the infrastructure of a ‘real’ city, the developer’s target clients include university researchers, federal agencies and commercial enterprises. The facility aims to combine elements of private and governmental test environments like Gravesend, a military and police complex in the UK, Liberty City, a drone-oriented cityscape in the US and Mcity, a newly-built autonomous vehicle testing site in Detroit.

city lab simulation space

If you have one in your town it is a safe bet CITE has one as well, from churches and highways to a city hall and even an airport. While this place contains all a community could ever hope for, the only ‘residents’ of the place will be a staff of over 300 that maintain its infrastructure and supervise experiments. Imagine the reaction of some archeologist from the distant future, seeing a sort of dystopian settlement wired for full surveillance and connected by a vast array of underground tunnels (The Cabin in the Woods comes to mind, poster below), but at the same time oddly unoccupied and devoid of art, brands or billboards.

cabin in the woods movie

Noting the lack of these quintessential hallmarks of modern civilization, a professor at the University of New Mexico decided to ask what kind of public art would fit such a strange and made-to-be-deserted city. Her students solicited proposals from around the country and selected a set of winners. Ingenious ideas included: sculptural mounds made from the dirt displaced during excavation, testing paint colors around the complex for durability and weather resistance and a farcical strategy to sell lots and gentrify the faux city.

city lab public art

More from Pegasus Global Holdings: “As a privately-owned, privately-operated test and evaluation center, CITE is open and accessible to a wide array of public and private customer segments – domestic and international. The structure and policies in place at CITE are specifically designed to remove legal, cultural and budgetary impediments as are currently prevalent in the process of moving beyond basic research and development activities.”

Share on Facebook





[ By WebUrbanist in Architecture & Cities & Urbanism. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


WebUrbanist

 
Comments Off on City Lab: World’s Largest Urban Simulator Spans 26 Square Miles

Posted in Creativity

 

27. August 2015

28 Aug

Das Bild des Tages von: Ralf Müller

© Ralf Müller

Im Ausblick: Ein Interview, hochformatige Panoramen und das Archiv von National Geographic.
kwerfeldein – Fotografie Magazin | Fotocommunity

 
Comments Off on 27. August 2015

Posted in Equipment

 

NASA employs 150-year-old photography technique to measure shock waves from supersonic flight

28 Aug

NASA has turned to a process devised in 1864 to help it measure shockwaves created by supersonic aircraft flight. The method, schlieren photography, was invented by German scientist August Toepler to observe the effect of objects moving through transparent media, such as water or air. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on NASA employs 150-year-old photography technique to measure shock waves from supersonic flight

Posted in Uncategorized