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Cool Visual Art images

11 Dec

A few nice visual art images I found:

Visual Libraries Project
visual art
Image by Claire_Sambrook
VISUAL LIBRARIES – Leave your Mark.
A collaborative, visual project which encourages you to sign out a Visual Library Book and ‘Leave Your Mark’.

A Visual Library Book is whatever you want it to be, a sketchbook, a journal, a diary, a notepad.
You can ‘Leave Your Mark’ in whatever way you want, ranging from drawing, writing, sewing, adding photographs, markings, printing and sticking. How you make your marks is entirely up to you. All we ask is that you have fun with the different themes. Just borrow it on your library card with other books and materials. If you are not already a member, just ask the staff to help you.

45 Visual Library Books have been placed in Portsmouth Central Library and each has its own theme ranging from; Portsmouth, My City, When I Open My Eyes, Whilst I Was Waiting, Love, What’s in My Pocket and Memories. The intention is for you to feel free to explore the Visual Library Books and choose a theme that you like.
In Association with: Rhodia, Seawhite, Portsmouth City Council, University of Portsmouth, COPIC Pens

www.visuallibraries.com

For Further Details: claire.sambrook@port.ac.uk

Visual Libraries Project
visual art
Image by Claire_Sambrook
VISUAL LIBRARIES – Leave your Mark.
A collaborative, visual project which encourages you to sign out a Visual Library Book and ‘Leave Your Mark’.

A Visual Library Book is whatever you want it to be, a sketchbook, a journal, a diary, a notepad.
You can ‘Leave Your Mark’ in whatever way you want, ranging from drawing, writing, sewing, adding photographs, markings, printing and sticking. How you make your marks is entirely up to you. All we ask is that you have fun with the different themes. Just borrow it on your library card with other books and materials. If you are not already a member, just ask the staff to help you.

45 Visual Library Books have been placed in Portsmouth Central Library and each has its own theme ranging from; Portsmouth, My City, When I Open My Eyes, Whilst I Was Waiting, Love, What’s in My Pocket and Memories. The intention is for you to feel free to explore the Visual Library Books and choose a theme that you like.
In Association with: Rhodia, Seawhite, Portsmouth City Council, University of Portsmouth, COPIC Pens

www.visuallibraries.com

For Further Details: claire.sambrook@port.ac.uk

 
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How to Take Beautiful Bokeh Christmas Images [With 39 Stunning Examples]

11 Dec

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LOVE 10/50

It’s beginning to feel a lot like Christmas… and in our forums I’ve noticed more and more great Christmas images being shared – some of which feature a technique that is always popular at this time of year – Bokeh Christmas lights shots.

Christmas tree lights II

The technique takes a bit of experimenting and practice but is relatively simple to do. You need some Christmas lights and a camera lens with a reasonably ‘fast’ aperture (or a large aperture).

#ds385 - Red Wool Socks

The key is to shoot at the larger end of your available aperture – this throws the background (and foreground) of your shot out of focus and any Christmas lights in the foreground or background will become little balls of light.

Dreaming about bokeh

As you’ll see in most of the images featured in this series – the technique is particularly good if you also have some element in your shot that is in focus. This ‘subject’ might be a person, a pet, a Christmas decoration or something else.

Gracie

You can make the little balls of light bigger by increasing the distance between your in focus subject and the out of focus lights in the background.

Holiday bokeh

While most of the images in this series have the Christmas lights in the background of the image (behind the subject) it is also possible to create the little bokeh balls of light by putting the lights in the foreground of your image (in front of your subject). You can see this in the image below. The impact is a little different as the bokeh balls will cover part of your subject.

335/365: ¿Que puedo hacer con estas luces que no se haya hecho ya?

Another popular technique is to create different shaped bokeh. You can make stars, hearts or even little snow flakes like the image below.

Joyeux Noël!  Merry Christmas!

To get these different little bokeh shapes is pretty simple. You just need to make a little cutout ‘mask’ for your lens. Rather than go over how to do it here check out this video tutorial that will walk you through it here.

My Cat's Starry Christmas

Love a Good Buzz - 347/365

The other way to change the shape of your bokeh balls is to experiment with different apertures. You’ll find that in most cases the larger your aperture the rounder the ball – but go for a slightly smaller aperture you may find your bokeh becomes more hexagonal (or Heptagonal or Octagonal… the number of sides will depend upon how many blades your lens has).

christmas kiss

The different ways of using this bokeh Christmas lights technique is only limited by your imagination. Here are some more examples to give you ideas. Enjoy!

Letters to Santa

Christmas Ball-keh (Explored!)

bright lights

Day 4 - 25 Days of Christmas 2007

Brighton Clock Tower

magic of the season

love

Light way

lick

Seasons Greetings - Explore 28.12.09

Happy Holidays!

Merry Christmas to all my Flickr friends.

Blurry Christmas....

What to my wondering eyes should appear ...

Have a Very Bokeh Christmas

Warm Fuzzies

Elvis!

HAPPY CHRISTMAS BOKEH! XXX WWW.SIMONKEEPING.CO.UK

Christmas lights bokeh

2007-0001-0016

Boy Christmas I

Mireia

50mm Noctilux-M f/1.0

Christmas Lights Bokeh Baby

Merry Christmas

Bokeh Hostage + 65/365

...and to all a good night!

Falling Stars (EXPLORE #18)

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Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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How to Take Beautiful Bokeh Christmas Images [With 39 Stunning Examples]


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Cool Visual Art images

11 Dec

A few nice visual art images I found:

Fractal shadows…
visual art
Image by Benjamin Pender
Cut out myriad triangles out of my "visual journal" on 5 pages, each page with another iteration of the fractal.

0st page – Cut 1 trangle, result 1 triangle
1nd Page -Cut 3 triangles (resulting in 5)
2rd Page – Cut 9 trianges (resulting in 14)
3th page – Cut 27 triangles (resulting in 41)
4th page – Cut 81trianges (resulting in 122)

Equation 3^n =Cut

Also, I noticed that if you add the result of the previous page with the current "cut" number, you get the result of the current page…

Kyoto Ryoanji 2 – Coin Shaped Shrine Fountain
visual art
Image by jondresner
This is a visual pun: the square hole actually serves as a radical for all four kanji.
Top: 5, which combines with mouth to mean "myself"
Left: arrow, which combines with mouth to mean "knowledge"
Right: Beautiful/good, which combines with mouth to mean "only" or "merely"
Bottom: Doesn’t mean anything by itself, though it could be read as "leg" which combines with mouth to read "foot"

I don’t think there’s a hidden phrase there, but I could be wrong.

 
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Delete Images?? NEVER!!

11 Dec

Recently, Russel Masters wrote that deleting images was good for you.  While I agree there is a reason to delete some images- those clearly out of focus, poorly exposed, or with fatal composition flaws, I’m not a fan of wholesale deletion of images from a set.  This rule applies to portraits, landscapes, and anything else I shoot.

Sand Harbor

This image of Sand Harbor at Lake Tahoe, Nevada, languished on a hard drive for 3 years before I got around to editing it. It wasn't even in the folder I designated for the "keepers" I shot that day. The technical details: ISO 100, 1/25, f/16. EOS 5D Mark II with EF 14mm f/2.8L II.

Here’s the deal.  I go through all of my images and immediately begin processing the ones that immediately strike me as being worthy.  Eventually I get through those, and then tend to walk away.  At this point, it seems Mr. Masters is content to keep the ones he’s deemed as “keepers” and deleting everything else in the name of hard disk space.

I emphatically disagree with this philosophy.  First off, disk space in this day and age is relatively cheap. A 1TB external hard drive can be had for less than $ 100USD. I try to maintain redundancy with regards to hard drives, keeping two identical drives to store the files.  One is my working copy, while the other is simply a backup of RAW files, moved offsite to my office for safe keeping.

Second, and more importantly, sometimes the emotion from the shoot gets in the way.   Several times, I’ve come home from a trip or a shoot and immediately worked on the images that struck me as keepers as soon as I shot them.  And those images still strike me as keepers, even years later. But I’ve had several times where I went back through images years after the originals were shot, and found gems that for whatever reason I didn’t even mark as a potential keeper.

The above shot of Sand Harbor, Lake Tahoe is one example.  I shot this image, along with others that day, in 2009. I had several nice sunset shots and dusk shots that really popped for me. This shot was taken as I waited for the light to get more dramatic, and then was apparently forgotten in the heat of the moment as other images jumped ahead of it in my mind.  Fast forward to 2012.  I was going through old images on this hard drive, just basically looking for images I hadn’t yet processed and might want to.  I was bored and was looking for something to do.  I went through the images shot that evening and saw this one and wondered what I had been thinking in not processing the file.  Truth be told, it was a lot easier to process than some of the images I immediately worked on.  I simply tweaked the saturation and contrast and was done. Posted it to my website minutes after I completed the processing.  Within two hours, I sold a 20×30 print on acrylic for $ 225USD. Well worth the time and effort to edit.

Boston Skyline

This is another image, taken the same month as the Lake Tahoe shot. This was an exceptional shooting day for me. I went into Boston in search of this spot, found parking, and was thrilled to see all the sailboats on the Charles River, making for an excellent foreground. I used every lens in my bag this day, getting salable shots with each- everything from a 14mm f/2.8 to the 70-200 f2.8L IS. This shot was taken with the EF 24-105 f/4L IS, at 47mm. But due to the number of good shots captured that day, I just ignored it as being too blah. Since I finally edited it, it has sold 5 times!.

Another such image is this one, of the Boston skyline. I’d shot this image in August 2009 as well. I’d had several shots I absolutely loved from this set.  For some reason, I find some of my best selling images are from in and around Boston.  I had decided to see what else I hadn’t posted to my website to see if I had anything worth posting that I thought might sell.  This image was one.   It’s less dramatic than some of the keepers I immediately edited that day.  In fact, it’s a fairly standard shot. But I had a great sky and good light that evening.  I felt it was worth working this image and posting it.  I’m glad I did.  In the 3 months since it was posted, the image has sold 5 times! Between the two images, I’ve made enough to purchase five 1TB hard drives- making Mr. Master’s argument about saving disk space moot.

This shot was instantly deemed a keeper in my eyes, and edited immediately. I loved the effect the 14mm lens had on the clouds, and the interest added by the sailboats in the foreground. I had deemed the other shot, Boston Skyline, a bit too blah at the time of the initial edit. Three years later, I edited it, and within a few months has become one my best selling images.

The bottom line is, I would be VERY careful of what I delete in terms of images.  Yes, get rid of those clearly flawed images. But the rest, even the ones that don’t strike you as worth processing?  Give them some time to age.  You may find they are a fine wine just waiting to be uncorked.

 

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Delete Images?? NEVER!!


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Cool Visual Art images

09 Dec

Some cool visual art images:

art-2010 / resultaat creatiever speelsheid / result creative playfulness
visual art
Image by dietmut

Vision II (21 Century Op-Art Set)
visual art
Image by Visual Artist Frank Bonilla
II of III abstracts I have named Vision.

Light Wave (21st Century Op-Art Set)
visual art
Image by Visual Artist Frank Bonilla
There is a source for light, it all starts with a wave. Roll the ball on your mouse, to see the wave. You may also use scroll bar on your screen to create the movement.

 
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Cool Visual Art images

09 Dec

A few nice visual art images I found:

art-2009 / nieuwe experimenten / new experiments
visual art
Image by dietmut
Gisteren avond ben ik aan het experimenteren geslaagd en dit is 1 of 6 resultaten van mijn knutselwerk.
Yesterday night I have gone for playful experiments and this is 1 of 6 results of my amateur handicraft

art-20009 / nieuwe experimenten / new experiments
visual art
Image by dietmut
Gisteren avond ben ik aan het experimenteren geslaagd en dit is 1 of 6 resultaten van mijn knutselwerk.
Yesterday night I have gone for playful experiments and this is 1 of 6 results of my amateur handicraft

art-2009 / nieuwe experimenten / new experiments
visual art
Image by dietmut
Gisteren avond ben ik aan het experimenteren geslaagd en dit is 1 of 6 resultaten van mijn knutselwerk.
Yesterday night I have gone for playful experiments and this is 1 of 6 results of my amateur handicraft

 
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The Best Thing For Your Smartphone Images

08 Dec

Set Your Smartphone Pictures Free

For the photographic community I think it’s fair to say that the jury is still out so far as the legitimacy of smartphone photography goes. Some say that it’s a fad, others that it is the future. Although I am no evangelist, I do think that the quality of images now achievable is pretty impressive and I can believe a future where the point and shoot is surpassed by the smartphone camera. As you can probably tell, I love taking pictures with my camera phone.

So if you are like me your phone is probably jammed with all kinds of images none of which do anything more than live on your handset or PC.  I have always been a massive fan of printing my images, there is just something so satisfying about taking a picture from conception to capture and finally on to paper yet for some reason we don’t think that this applies to the pictures we take on our phone.  Recently I discovered the joy of printing images directly from my phone and I can hand on heart say that it’s the best thing you can possibly do with your smartphone pictures.  Just in case you aren’t sure how to get started here is a short guide:

Disclaimer – The steps below cover wireless printing from the iPhone (just because it’s the only smartphone I have).   It is possible to print from Android handsets however the operating system doesn’t (I believe) do this natively so you may need to download an separate app to do this but the process should be broadly similar.

  • The printer – The best way to print directly from your phone is by using a wireless printer however not all printers support Apple AirPrint so don’t forget to check that your printer is compatible.  The Apple website contains a list of compatible printers however its worth checking your printer manufacturers website also.
  • Get your media – You can print on any media which your printer can handle however my preference is to use one of the various pre cut photo papers which are readily available online or in any stationary store.  I personally like to print on 6 x 4 glossy sheets as I find that this give a pleasing balance between image size and quality.  You can go larger if you like but don’t forget that the maximum size you can print and maintain image quality will be dependent upon the resolution of your camera.   A batch of 50 sheets retails in the region of £5 (about $ 8 US) so assuming you already have a printer its a pretty cheap investment.

Printing

As iOS have inbuilt support for wireless printing (via AirPrint) sending your images to your printer is actually very simple.  Check out the video below to see the actual process but in summary here are the main steps:

  • Navigate to your Photos app.
  • Select a photo to print.
  • Tap the share icon (the one with the pointing arrow).
  • Tap the print icon.

Summary

Printing from your phone is a fantastic way to make more of your smartphone images and is an especially good way to share your mobile masterpieces with friends and family.  Having recently discovered the joys of printing from my phone I can highly recommend giving this a try, its cheap, easy and a great way to bring your smartphone pictures to life. Enough said!

 

 

 

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

The Best Thing For Your Smartphone Images


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Cool Visual Art images

08 Dec

A few nice visual art images I found:

44 Hours Cornucopia Momentum documentary video, part two
visual art
Image by Alexandra Xubersnak · Taking time out
I was asked if I would document the 44 hours visual arts live performance at the Odyssey sim on May 28-30. This was highly interesting and the result is three videos which I hope catched at least part of the extensive range of works presented.

The first part focus a bit more on a few of the visitors at the performance whereas part two and three will show more of the amazing artwork and effects.

Performance by Bendix Freutel (Eifachfilm Vacirca d-oob) in Second Life and in Kunst-Fenster Reigoldswil (Switzerland). And joined by a number of in-world artists during the course of events.

See more documentation of the impressive event here:
www.flickr.com/groups/d-oo-b/

 
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Cool Visual Art images

07 Dec

Check out these visual art images:

Laneway Art – Artist – Newell Harry
visual art
Image by Crouchy69
Circle/s in the Round for (Miles and Miles + 1)
Newell Harry

"I’ll play it first and tell you what it is later.

Miles Davis

Contemplating Davis’s quote and the odd job of describing what I’m doing before it’s done, I’m stuck… so I’ll start with a memory. I grew up in a house of jazz, soul and R&B. As a kid I recall my mother amping up her weekend housework to Jim McLeod’s “Jazz Track”, or doing ‘the Bump’ with Aunt Vin to EWF or the Pointer Sisters in the kitchen. Like jazz, our home was entwined order and chaos.

Circle/s in the Round’ for (Miles and Miles + 1) takes its title from the breakthrough Miles Davis album, "Circle in the Round" (1967). The album marks the first studio recording in which Davis shifts from the ‘traditional’ acoustic structure of a jazz quintet, to that of electronic composition and ‘fusion’. The significance of the album heralds the beginning of Davis’s ‘electronic period’; an engagement that continued to his death, ending with the Hip Hop inspired, “Doo-Bop” album (1991). Incidentally, neon, as sculpture, also finds its inception around the same time as Davis’s shift – the heat of late sixties high modernism.

Back at Temperance Lane, the spatial rhythm of pulsating concentric circles is at once a visual homage to Davis, whilst containing an encoded word-pun to be kept ‘undisclosed’. The out-of-sync flashing circles and the textual word-play links, conceptually, to structures inherent to jazz composition, and spoken-word improvisation. Taoist philosophy fits in there, too, but without conjuring the hippy dippy it’s probably best to call it quits."

Taken with Sigma 10-20mm, tripod & 3 bracket shot. HDR conversion in Nik Software HDR Efex Pro, PP in CS5.

Laneway Art – Artist – Newell Harry
visual art
Image by Crouchy69
Circle/s in the Round for (Miles and Miles + 1)
Newell Harry

"I’ll play it first and tell you what it is later.

Miles Davis

Contemplating Davis’s quote and the odd job of describing what I’m doing before it’s done, I’m stuck… so I’ll start with a memory. I grew up in a house of jazz, soul and R&B. As a kid I recall my mother amping up her weekend housework to Jim McLeod’s “Jazz Track”, or doing ‘the Bump’ with Aunt Vin to EWF or the Pointer Sisters in the kitchen. Like jazz, our home was entwined order and chaos.

Circle/s in the Round’ for (Miles and Miles + 1) takes its title from the breakthrough Miles Davis album, "Circle in the Round" (1967). The album marks the first studio recording in which Davis shifts from the ‘traditional’ acoustic structure of a jazz quintet, to that of electronic composition and ‘fusion’. The significance of the album heralds the beginning of Davis’s ‘electronic period’; an engagement that continued to his death, ending with the Hip Hop inspired, “Doo-Bop” album (1991). Incidentally, neon, as sculpture, also finds its inception around the same time as Davis’s shift – the heat of late sixties high modernism.

Back at Temperance Lane, the spatial rhythm of pulsating concentric circles is at once a visual homage to Davis, whilst containing an encoded word-pun to be kept ‘undisclosed’. The out-of-sync flashing circles and the textual word-play links, conceptually, to structures inherent to jazz composition, and spoken-word improvisation. Taoist philosophy fits in there, too, but without conjuring the hippy dippy it’s probably best to call it quits."

Taken with Sigma 10-20mm, tripod & 3 bracket shot. HDR conversion in Nik Software HDR Efex Pro, PP in CS5.

 
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Cool Visual Art images

07 Dec

A few nice visual art images I found:

art-2010
visual art
Image by dietmut
original: farm2.static.flickr.com/1082/4598562081_586c363690_m.jpg

Desdemona
visual art
Image by Original Bliss
Soul Journal Entry
December 5, 2009
Soul Journal #13

There is a story behind every page.
Visit:

Original Bliss – Soul Deep

art – 2010
visual art
Image by dietmut
original: farm5.static.flickr.com/4015/4619117220_4f45b47045_m.jpg

 
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