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Posts Tagged ‘Found’

Lost & Found: Underwater Ghost Town Resurfaces 30 Years Later

23 Jan

[ By WebUrbanist in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

abandoned village from above

Like a corroded time capsule, this submerged village has risen from the depths after being flooded decades ago when the local lake broke its banks and left Epecuen under dozens of feet of water. In 1985, a rare weather pattern broke a nearby dam first, then the dike protecting the town, quickly making most of it uninhabitable. Today, long-term changes in the regional climate have brought down the overall level of the lake, resurfacing the town.

sunken village resurfaced underwater

Giving a tour of his devastated hometown, the man in the award-winning video above , Pablo Novak, claims his father predicted the return of water to the areas of land on which people were building back in the 1980s – at its peak, the place drew in over 25,000 tourists a year. Today, Pablo is the only remaining resident, slowly exploring the remnants now revealed as waters around the lake have lowered.

villa epecun from above

underwater village before after

Located near Buenos Aires, it is hard to imagine that this place – with a permanent population of 5,000  at one point – was once a busy destination from tourists around the country and even the world, renowned for its high-salinity lake in which people came to bathe. This salt content is largely responsible for the high levels of damage done to the town’s buildings and infrastructure during its years underwater.

underwater deserted abandoned buildings

underwater village ruins

slaughterhouse abandoned town

First, the fields began to flood, driving our narrator’s cows, horses, pigs sheep and goats back further onto land and forcing Pablo to buy a family home in a neighboring village. Now 85 years old, he always assumed the town would be rebuilt, but that has never come to pass.

sunken town ruins

sunken village washed roots

abandoned underwater town resufraced

Since the waters have receded, Pablo now tries to appreciate the solitude left in its wake and gives tours to those who come these days not to soak but to see the once-sunken village now risen once again to the surface. Images by Sam Verhaert, Jonathan Evans and Pablo Gonzales via Inhabitat.

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[ By WebUrbanist in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

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Photographer’s notebook from Captain Scott’s last Antarctica expedition found

29 Oct

A notebook containing recorded details of plates shot by explorer George Murray Levick during Captain Scott’s final expedition has been found and restored by the Antarctic Heritage Trust of New Zealand. Discovered in melted snow outside the hut that was Scott’s base during the British Antarctic Expedition, the notebook is said to contain pencil-written details of ‘the dates, subjects and exposure details for the photographs he took during 1911 while at Cape Adare’. Learn more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Found film: Keep a lookout for photographic treasures

08 May

untitled-scanned-19-900.jpg

The next time you’re in a thrift shop or antique store, keep a lookout for photographic treasures. While old cameras are always eye-catching, the images captured with those cameras are often more intriguing as Mike Ames and Derek Wong discovered. Ames came across some tins of developed Kodak Panatomic film and Wong bought a roll of developed Kodak Super XX film. They both discovered an unexpected look back at history. Learn more

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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CP+ 2014: Things we found that had been cut in half

16 Feb

DSCF1307.jpg

Building modern digital cameras and lenses is an exacting business. Each product is made up of sometimes hundreds of tiny components, assembled to meticulously narrow tolerances and if one piece is out of alignment, the whole is compromised. But you want to see what stuff looks like when it’s been cut in half? Yes. You do, you know you do. It’s OK, we won’t tell anyone. Click through for a look at things that we found at CP+ that have been cut in half. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Mount St. Helens images found decades later

13 Jan

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New images of Washington’s Mount St. Helens have been recently discovered. Reid Blackburn, a staff photographer for the The Columbian newspaper, took photographs in a flight over the volcano in April 1980. When he got back to the paper’s studio his roll was set aside and never developed. Until now. Learn more

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Things we found stuffed down the back of CES 2014

13 Jan

ollocolors.jpg

CES 2014: After all of the meetings, hands-ons and reports were done, we spent a little time wandering the CES 2014 show floor, as we always do when time allows, and found a few interesting products on the side streets between the towering booths of major manufacturers. Many photo-focused products this year related to mobile in some way, standing beside an endless array of iCases, iKeyboards and iEverything else. Click through to see what we found when we left the beaten path…

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Works of Impossible Architecture Built from Found Photos

04 Mar

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Drawing & Digital. ]

found architecture

Like dreams while you are having them, these buildings make perfect sense subjectively and yet no sense objectively. They are seamlessly integrated, yet structurally surreal … and, like a dream when waking up: the details are hard to recall when you look away.

found architecture photo collages

Jim Kazanjian searches through tens of thousands of photographs in search of the perfect bits and pieces for each otherworldly creation. Some of the results seem almost plausible, while others stretch the limits of gravity, structural integrity and even the imagination.

found buildings black white surreal

Per his artist statement at 23Sandy (where you can also buy prints): “Jim Kazanjian’s surreal landscapes offer phantasmagoric visions of a where-is-this world, defined by impossibly complex architecture and M.C.Escher-esque black-and-white graphics.”

found architecture impossible structures

“Inspired by the imaginary realms of cult author H.P. Lovecraft—whose wild, cosmic short stories set the mold for much of the 20th century’s best science fiction—Kazanjian’s aim is to redress the “misunderstanding that photography has a kind of built-in objectivity…to defamiliarize the familiar.”

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The Incredible Lost and Found Art of Hand-Painted Signage

24 Oct

[ By Delana in Design & Graphics & Branding. ]

While technology usually makes things faster, it rarely produces the kind of unique and soulful results that come from the hearts and hands of humans. The sign industry fell as a casualty to a world obsessed with technology’s quicker, cheaper, utterly identical products. But a new generation of traditional sign painters is revitalizing this amazing trade, bringing the soul back to the business of storefronts and billboards.

(all images via: Princeton Architectural Press)

A new book from filmmakers Faythe Levine and Sam Macon details the history and current state of the surprisingly fascinating sign painting industry. (Princeton Architectural Press, the book’s publisher, provided WebUrbanist with a copy of the book for the purposes of this article.) The book tells the stories of sign painters, both young and old, and their take on their unique industry. Each segment of the book includes examples of the painters’ work and often glimpses into their workspaces.

As recently as the 1980s, it was impossible to walk down any street in America without seeing hand-painted signs of some type. Storefronts, billboards, murals, banners, and even street signs were hand-lettered with brushes and paint, relying entirely on the skill of the painter to make them readable and eye-catching. And their skill is considerable. Just imagine trying to paint a professional-looking sign – one that can not only rival a vinyl sign but outstrip it in terms of individual style – using nothing more than a toolkit of brushes and some jars of paint. The vast majority of us couldn’t do it.

In more recent years, distressingly homogeneous signs have largely – though not completely – taken the place of these carefully hand-lettered ones. The technology used to create signage today is fast and cheap, but lacks that human touch. Entire streets full of store fronts in any given city look exactly the same – laser-cut vinyl letters don’t allow for any type of personality or variation, and that is to the detriment of not only the sign painters, but also the general public and – maybe most significantly – the store owners themselves.

According to Sean Barton, one of the sign painters featured in Levine and Macon’s book, many business owners don’t want to invest in their shops like they used to. They would rather slap up a vinyl sign that costs next to nothing than take pride in their livelihood. A great-looking storefront with hand-painted signage is bound to attract more business than a shop that looks exactly the same as 20 other shops on the street. This is beginning to dawn on many business owners, says Barton – they are realizing the power of hand-painted signs and showing a new appreciation for this nearly-lost craft.

And that is what this resurgence of hand-painted signage is about: the power of individuality. Seeing the same lettering, the same color schemes, the same type of signs everywhere we go has made us immune to the sad fact that uniformity has taken over our cities. This is never more apparent than when we walk by a shop with carefully hand-painted signs. It, almost without fail, will seem like the coolest and most interesting shop on the street, even before we walk through the door. Why? Because that store owner took pride in his or her business and chose to display the individuality that other shops are missing.

Many sign painters working today began their painting careers under very different circumstances: as graffiti writers. It makes sense, in a way, to move from the illegal side of painting in public to the legal side. But can they possibly get as much enjoyment and satisfaction from painting the letters and logos of their clients as they did from tagging boxcars? Apparently, the sign painting business offers enough of a challenge to keep these modern-day artisans fulfilled. In sign painting, as in graffiti, planning and spacing are key – and in both, the painter’s personality and humanity shine through.

There is a deeper message here, not only for business owners but for all of America. When corporations began taking over the towns and cities with their homogeneous style and predictable experiences, we lost something. We lost the personable nature of Main Street and the colorful mish-mash of downtown. As our culture begins to pull away from the trap of corporate sameness, we will no doubt see at least some businesses return to the traditional art of hand-painted signs. And the sign painters will, as always, remain behind the scenes as the people who dramatically impact our buying habits, but about whom we rarely stop to think.


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[ By Delana in Design & Graphics & Branding. ]

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Similar, but not copied, image found to breach copyright

25 Jan

Routemaster.jpg

Amateur Photographer magazine has published an interesting story about a copyright infringement case of similar, but not directly copied, images. The issue of copyright is thorny, contentious and often misunderstood but this case sheds some light on the current attitude of courts in the UK. Despite significant differences between the two images (there was no implication that the second image was a duplicate of the first), the court found that the second image copied substantially from the ‘creative expression’ of the first (that is the elements that can be protected by copyright in the original image, including a consideration of the composition, lighting and processing of the image).

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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A Village Lost and Found by Brian May & Elena Vidal (EPK Part 1)

23 Mar

“A Village Lost and Found” by Brian May & Elena Vidal …The London Stereoscopic Company [Part 1]