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Posts Tagged ‘More’

Coast Stories: 9 More Abandoned Lighthouses

20 Jan

[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

9 more abandoned lighthouses
A long, long time aglow… but even the brightest shining light will inevitably fade to black. Such is the case with these 9 abandoned lighthouses, rendered into obsolete obelisks by the incremental progress of time and technology.

Whiteford Point Lighthouse – Wales, UK

Whiteford Point Lighthouse Wales abandoned(images via: Panoramio/Ed Morris and Artificial Owl)

It may not look it but Whiteford Point Lighthouse, located just off the coast of Gower Peninsula at Whiteford Point, south Wales, was a triumph of engineering in its heyday. Think of it, how many cast iron structures dating from the end of the American Civil War are still standing today? Activated in 1866 and snuffed for good in 1921, the lighthouse’s metal walls were once covered in protective black bitumen.

Whiteford Point Lighthouse Wales abandoned(image via: Artificial Owl)

105 tapered cast-iron plates, each one 32mm (1.28 inches) thick, form the lighthouse’s outer walls. The plates were fastened to one another with cast-iron bolts weighing 2 pounds each. Sixty years after its decommissioning and in response to pleas from area fishermen, the Whiteford Point Lighthouse was relit using an automatic solar-powered beacon but when that failed a few years later, the lighthouse was dimmed permanently.

Sabine Pass Lighthouse – Louisiana, USA

Sabine Pass Lighthouse Louisiana abandoned(images via: NOLA.com, W5AZN, cmh2315fl and Captdave5)

Looking at first glance like a mythical Confederate secret weapon, the Sabine Pass Lighthouse in Cameron, Louisiana has stood watch over the Gulf coast since construction was completed in 1856. Though visually just a shadow of its original white-painted glory (black stripes were added in 1932), the octagonal brickwork tower stands 85 feet tall and sports 8 flying buttresses that give it a rocketship shape.

Sabine Pass Lighthouse Louisiana abandoned(image via: Lighthouse Explorer)

The Sabine Pass Lighthouse originally ran on whale oil and, barring the Civil War years, remained lit by one means or another from 1857 to 1952. The lighthouse was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982 and having survived countless hurricanes and marsh fires, presently awaits restoration.

Gardskagi Light – Iceland

Gardskagi Lighthouse Iceland inactive(images via: ~steini~ and Oli Haukur)

Built in 1897 and inactive since 1944, Gardskagi Light is located on the northwestern tip of the Reykjanes peninsula about 8 km (5 miles) northwest of Keflavik. The lighthouse consists of an 11 meter (36 ft) tall square tower with a small attached single-story equipment room.

Gardskagi Lighthouse Iceland inactive(image via: AssyntNature)

The lighthouse’s lantern has been removed but rather than let the remains slowly deteriorate, the local authorities have reinvented the site as a fenced bird-watching tower with access to the topmost level via the internal stairway. With its whitewashed walls and natty twin red bands, the Gardskagi Light seems about as happy as an abandoned Icelandic lighthouse can be.

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Coast Stories 9 More Abandoned Lighthouses

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[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

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How to use your canon(only) digital camera/digicam as a webcam (more detailed)

18 Jan

The impossible is now possible now with your canon digicam. It can be used for chatting and video conferencing. Link to camtasia studio 5: download.techsmith.com or download.techsmith.com Remote capture download.cnet.com For mac: download.cnet.com All previous versions:…
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
 

Architecture Meets Fashion: Shoes by Hadid, Gehry & More

03 Jan

[ By Steph in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

Architect Shoes Main

How would the architectural styles of Zaha Hadid, Frank Gehry and Santiago Calatrava translate to shoes? As these 6 collaborations prove, sometimes the results are just as you’d imagine, and sometimes they’re completely unexpected. These architect-designed and inspired shoes range from the practical and wearable to sculptural art objects.

Zaha Hadid for Melissa

Architect Shoes Hadid Melissa

Brazilian brand Melissa offered the ideal medium with which architect Zaha Hadid could indulge her creativity: moulded plastic, which makes it easy to create shapes that can’t really be achieved with more traditional shoemaking materials. Says Hadid, “The design engages with the ?uid organic contours of the body. The shoes asymmetric quality conveys an inherent sense of move-ment to the design, evoking continuous transformation. The concept addresses the perception of wearing the shoe in motion rather than a static display on a shopping window.”

Frank Gehry for J.M. Weston

Architect Shoes Frank Gehry

Would you ever imagine that shoes designed by Frank Gehry would be so… conventional? The architect known for flashy, amorphous metallic structures designed these six-buttoned black-and-white leather boots for the 2009 collection of shoe company J.M. Weston.  “You shouldn’t have to differentiate between disciplines, shoes are very architectural and always have been, and even more recently there are new shoes… (that are) buildings.”

Zaha Hadid for Lacoste

Architect Shoes Hadid Lacoste

Zaha Hadid designed a series of limited edition shoes available in quantities of just 1,000. According to Hadid, the shoes were designed “utilizing dynamic fluid grids, which when wrapped around the foot, expand and contract to negotiate the body ergonomically – creating a unique undulating and radiating landscape, ultimately translated to shoes in fine calf leather.”

Julian Hakes for Mojito

Architect Shoes Julian Hakes

Architect Shoes Julian Hakes 2

The Mojito shoe by architect Julian Hakes wraps around the foot in a continuous ribbon, and lacks the footplate that one might say is the most essential part of the shoe. As with most of these creations, however, Hakes’ design is more about form than function.

Rem D. Koolhaas for United Nude

Architect Shoes Rem Koolhaas

The nephew of famed architect Rem Koolhaas, and an architect himself, Rem D. Koolhaas teamed up with British shoemaker Galahad Clark to create a line of architectural shoes for their brand United Nude. United Nude designs has also been inspired by other art forms, like furniture – they have a shoe that honors designers Charles and Ray Eames.

Santiago Calatrava-Inspired Shoes by Tea Petrovic

Architect Shoes Calatrava

The architecture of Santiago Calatrava is captured flawlessly in a series of cutting-edge shoes by Tea Petrovic  for a project at the Academy of Fine Arts in Sarajevo. “I have created a shoe collection, as my graduating project, that is centered around the idea that each shoe is an sculptural-architectural structured form. To underline their sculptural form, the shoes are kept white, which on the other hand emphasis the artistic language, present in the entire collection.”

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[ By Steph in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

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This Week in Music – Tim and Asha have a new set! Plus they talk Axl & Slash, The Gorillaz, Gucci Mane, and more.

30 Dec

This week hosts Asha K and Tim Bader have a new set with a live chat feed! They talk hot music news like Trent Reznor’s Golden Globe, Taylor Swift’s record sales, Axl and Slash’s love affair, Gucci Mane’s ice cream tattoo, and the Gorillaz new member! They bring back the website highlight with international-hiphop.com. Plus they look at videos for Rev Theory, Grouplove, and Ricky Martin. For more information, show notes, and schedules visit www.thisweekin.com.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Listen on Spotify: open.spotify.com Download on iTunes: itunes.apple.com Follow Ane on Facebook: www.facebook.com Music video by Ane Brun performing Do You Remember. Follow Ane Brun, buy the single on Itunes, and more anebrun.com (C) 2011 Balloon Ranger Recordings AB. Though “Do You Remember” is the first chapter released from a short film based to music from Ane’s forthcoming album “It all starts with One”, it is the third chapter in the film that houses no fewer than four orchestrated songs to be premiered in autumn 2011. The Director for the whole project Magnus Renfors, says of the venture: “Ane’s music is like a great ocean housed under the roof of a great old theater, where pictures are hung from the threads of the music shooting out, so it really does the job itself. That said, the images require a certain height and a substantively dramatic level, otherwise the music, sometimes so sublime and skin tingling, can rush over the head of the visual aspects. Ane and I have done stuff together since 2003 and already on the last album we talked about doing something bigger, more coherent, and this time it was really the one. ” “ONE”, as the film is called, is a poetic tapestry incorporating various threads interwoven on several levels, integrating and complimenting Ane’s delicately composed branches between hope, rage and grief. A heavy period of post-production is now rolling with the other chapters before the film is fully released in the fall. The film is produced by
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 

12 More of Our Best Photography Tutorials from 2012

28 Dec

From our post: a 15 minute exercise to help you improve your photos in 2012 (ideal for heading into 2013 too)

Today we continue our ‘best of 2012′ series with a look back on a mixed bag of tutorials and articles that were among our most popular in the year gone by.

  1. A 15 Minute Exercise To Help You Improve Your Photography in 2012
  2. Fun with Macro Photography
  3. 5 Tips To Transform Your Photography With Long Exposures
  4. Silhouette Photography Technique
  5. 6 Ways to Add Drama and Mystery to Your Images
  6. How to Use the Human Form to Give a Sense of Scale to Your Images [With Examples]
  7. 9 Architectural Photography Tips
  8. Want to Be a Professional Wedding Photographer? Here Are 10 Things You Should Know
  9. 15 Tips about Turning Pro
  10. Are You Practicing these 5 Natural Lighting Tips?
  11. 5 Tips for Controlling Natural Light
  12. How to Photograph a Funeral : 4 Tips I Hope you Never have to Use

Want a few more tutorials like this? Here are 11 of our best from 2011!

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

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

12 More of Our Best Photography Tutorials from 2012


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More Real Than Reality: 7 Artsy Augmented Reality Projects

26 Dec

[ By Delana in Conceptual & Futuristic & Technology. ]

augmented reality

Technology has taken over so many facets of our lives that the real world sometimes seems a little boring by comparison. Never fear – technology is slowly creeping into even the most mundane corners of our existence, making sure that we never have to face reality without some sort of augmented component ever again. These 15 designs, apps, inventions and gadgets put a digital element right into the real world – for better or for worse.

Virtual Mask

Augmented reality has the amazing ability to transform our world while also transforming ourselves, as the Zaphat proves. Put on the Zaphat and your whole identity is immediately transformed…at least when you’re seen through the camera of a mobile device running the Zappar app. The little patch on the front of the hat is actually a target that indicates your head location and orientation to the app, which then overlays a three-dimensional virtual mask on top of your face. The person operating the device can manipulate the type of mask and even interact with it virtually.

Street Art Comes to Life

Typically, street art is a fairly stationary form of personal expression. But thanks to futuristic augmented reality, street art can come to life and dance around right in front of observers. The LZRTAG augmented reality app allows people to aim a smartphone at a target in order to see a short animated street art clip. Anyone at all can upload an animation and print out a tag to decorate the world, all for free.

Finding Twitter Friends

Twitter’s geotagging feature allows friends to find one another in real life with an app called Twitter 360. Using an iPhone’s camera, the app creates an augmented reality overlay map that guides the iPhone holder to nearby friends based on their geotagged tweets. Users just have to follow the arrows that appear on the screen to be led directly to the nearest contact.

Augmented Reality Cinema

If you’ve ever traveled to a specific geographic spot just because it was featured in a favorite movie, the AR Cinema app from developers Halocline will be an exciting concept. The smartphone app senses when you’re in a movie-related location and shows you the famous scene(s) shot there. It’s an interesting way to combine a love of travel and a love of movies – and maybe even our collective love of smartphones.

Window Games

On a long car or train journey, boredom can set in pretty quickly. This conceptual game would use a Kinect and other simple hardware to create an augmented reality overlay on the actual scenery outside of the vehicle in which you’re traveling. By touching the window, players would be able to add all kinds of fun objects and elements to the passing scenery. The game, called Touch the Train Window, is from Tokyo design team Salad.

Augmented Reality Park

augmented reality park

(images via: Daily Mail)

If the beauty of nature is getting a bit boring, perhaps you’d like to spice things up a bit by throwing in some psychedelic visions and experiences. Swiss designer Jan Torpus has created a project called lifeClipper, in which visitors put on head-mounted display equipment for a walk through the park. The display shows the user’s actual surroundings but adds an extra layer to reality. This additional layer includes vivid colors, surreal characters, and an imaginatively enhanced landscape.

Real-Time Selective Video Editing

Changing your reality is simple when you’ve got high-tech augmented reality tools on your side. Software from a German university allows you to remove unsavory objects from your video footage as you’re filming it – just tell the software what you want to disappear and it magically erases it. The whole process takes only microseconds and is convincing to all but the sharpest eyes.

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[ By Delana in Conceptual & Futuristic & Technology. ]

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Nikon 18-105mm VR Review: More Than You’d Expect For the Price

23 Dec

www.artoftheimage.com – Reviewing the Nikon 18-105mm VR, a lot more lens than you’d expect considering the price.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

This is my entire Supra collection to date, all 20 pairs! Still buying more as we speak! FOR DOPE STREETWEAR CHECK OUT… www.martiangang.com

 
 

Why the Instagram Debacle Just Taught Every Tech Company to Take Your Photos More Seriously

22 Dec

Why the Instagram Debacle Just Taught Every Tech Company to Take Your Photos More Seriously

“Whatever kind of victory all those protests achieved, it wasn’t one for consumer rights — if anything, Instagram is the real winner here. The company just managed to score a round of positive press for retracting an unpopular change and give itself the ability to actually use photos in ads.” — Nilay Patel, The Verge

Over at the Verge Nilay Patel makes a case that the backlash earlier this week against Instagram’s unpopular TOS update was actually a loss for consumers not a gain. He argues that Instagram’s current TOS is broader than their more explicit proposed one and so consumers are worse off, not better off. Because Instagram technically still holds the rights to sell your photos under their current TOS, and even more broadly, the consumer backlash was misguided and really did more harm than good.

I disagree with Nilay and feel that actually this week’s backlash was one of the more significant movements yet for photo sharing on the web.

It’s not that Facebook (whose TOS is equally broad) and Instagram couldn’t legally sell your photos on the web under their broad TOS in the past or in the future, it’s more that *politically* it is now far more difficult for them to begin selling your photos out from under you on the web using their broader TOS.

Who cares what the TOS says, the message that Facebook got loud and clear this week is not to f*** with your photos. Your photos are important. You care about them. They are much more personal to you than Facebook may have previously considered. They have emotional importance and significance and collectively your users will rise up and bash you in the face if you try to exercise terms of your TOS that your lawyers have allowed you to screw around with photos. Whatever your future monetization strategies might be, they will not be based on a loss of control over OUR creative efforts — even our duckface creative efforts.

No, there is no question about it. Instagram lost this week and they lost big. This is in no way a positive for Instagram. People trust them less and they had to turn around and eat crow, they gained nothing.

Flickr won big at Instagram’s expense and Google+ won a little. Flickr won more because like Instagram their site is 100% about photography. They also just released a pretty awesome new iPhone app that is in fact even slickr than what Instagram currently offers.

Flickr also went out of their way last year to really drive home the ownership rights of your photos. This old forgotten post was revived with new life as a stark contrast to what it felt like Instagram was trying to pull. Kevin Systrom eventually even had to parrot back some of that “yes, we know your photos are your photos” stuff in his awkward non-apology apology.

Dan Lyons wrote a post that talked about Google+ winning some here too. Google+ smartly has a provision in their TOS that specifically limits their rights to your photos to basic operational use. Google+ is probably the most active community of photographers on the web today and are a natural beneficiary from what Lyons’ refers to as “Facebook Greedheads.”

The biggest winner or all though was you, the photographer. Whatever Instagram’s original intention was in being more specific in their TOS, it backfired on them. The idea that they could/would profit off your emotionally significant photos without your consent, authorization or most important, sharing the dough, hit a nerve with photographers and likely won’t be tried again by anyone in a long, long time.

The thing is, this didn’t have to be such a painful learning experience for Instagram. There was/is in fact a HUGE opportunity for some smart social media property make a ton of money off of your photos, Instagram just went about it wrong.

As much as Flickr’s deal with Getty sucks (photographers get a miserly 20% payout) photographers on Flickr still went bonkers for it when Flickr released it. The idea that you could actually get PAID to post your photos on a social network, paid ANYTHING, had most users on Flickr clamoring to get into the program, not out of the site.

Even though Flickr/Getty’s call for artists group is now closed (due to overwhelming demand) almost 90,000 photographers joined this group hoping to get selected by Getty for the right to sell their photos for the paltry 20% payout.

The difference with Flickr’s deal though was that 1. you CHOOSE to opt in and 2. at least you got paid something.

What if instead of Instagram saying, “hey, we might sell your photos without your consent and pay you NOTHING,” they said, “hey, do you want to sell your Instagram photos and if we sell them for you split the money 50/50″? Instead of losing accounts and becoming the scourge of the internet for three days, they would have had photographers rushing to sign up and begin marketing their images on their site.

Although there are sites out there like 500px and SmugMug that let you sell your photos now, Flickr is the only larger social network that has a selling program. Google+, Instagram, Facebook, even Twitter, all have a major opportunity to become the first large social network to allow us to license our images through their service and share in the revenue with them. This is a multi-BILLION dollar industry dominated at present by Getty who is not paying creatives enough for their work. What the internet does best is get rid of middlemen when they are being unreasonable, and an 80/20 split with photographers is unreasonable.

Instead of stealing our work and paying us zero, how about using your significant reach in reputation, marketing and search to partner with us and empower us to sell our work together. I guarantee you that whoever comes up with the best program first has some of the best photography on the web flooding your network. Even if 99% of us never sell a single photo, simply giving us the feeling that we have the opportunity to sell a photo would be a powerful incentive to get us active and humming on your network.


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10 Best Photography Books for Beginners + 20 More to Consider

20 Dec

Searching for a good photography book can be a quite difficult task that may simply waste your time and efforts. So I decided to help you in this pursuit. I have been browsing the web and reading customers reviews for two days in order to find the best photography books for beginners. Here I have collected 10 photography books recommended Continue Reading

The post 10 Best Photography Books for Beginners + 20 More to Consider appeared first on Photodoto.


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Salman Khan throws starry tantrums on the sets of his film, John Abraham gets candid, & more news

18 Dec

Asin & Akshay Kumar’s glam look Deepika Padukone might star opposite Shahid Kapoor in Knight & Day remake Geeta Basra & Harbhajan Singh go on a vacation Hrithik Roshan spotted at the Mumbai airport John Abraham gets candid with the media at an event John Abraham, Kangna Ranaut Anil Kapoor ateend Ekta Kapoor’s party Rajinikanth records a song for Kochadaiyaan Rani Mukerji lashes out at a photographer Saif Ali Khan clears land dispute rumours on zoOm Salman Khan throws starry tantrums on the sets of his film Your one stop destination for all the latest happenings,hot rumours and exclusive B-Town gossip… Subscribe NOW! www.youtube.com Follow us on twitter, facebook & Google+: www.twitter.com www.facebook.com gplus.to Also check out our website: www.zoomtv.in

 
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