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Posts Tagged ‘Project’

‘Cities at Night’ project puts citizens to work identifying images of Earth

21 Aug

Got a few minutes to spare? You’ve got enough time on your hands to help a group of researchers tackle a massive problem. Cities at Night is a project aiming to recruit help from ordinary citizens in classifying images of Earth at night taken by astronauts aboard the International Space Station. An effort of Universidad Complutense de Madrid staff and students, their main goal is to better understand and reduce light pollution. See how you can help

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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The Peeling Project: Thinking Outside The Big Box Store

10 Aug

[ By Steve in Architecture & Offices & Commercial. ]

BEST Products The Peeling Project 1a
What happened when an edgy architecture firm met an open-minded chain of big box retail stores? The very appealing Peeling Project, that’s what.

BEST Products The Peeling Project 1

We’ll leave it for others to document the startling and unlikely history of The Peeling Project in detail; our task at hand here is to display, in chronological order, the unique and individual extreme makeovers given to nine Best Products catalog showroom stores between 1971 and 1984. We’ll also show, if possible, the fate of these bold experiments in retail architecture following Best Products’ demise in 1998. We’ll begin where it all began: the Best Products store at 5400 Midlothian Turnpike in Richmond, VA.

BEST Products The Peeling Project 1c

BEST Products The Peeling Project 1d

Designed (as were all of the Project’s, er, projects) by architecture firm SITE Inc. (“Sculpture In The Environment”), the initial installation featuring a front facade that appears to be peeling away from the building ended up giving its name to the entire series of nine works. Built with safety in mind, the surrealistically embellished front facade was constructed with care and at obvious expense. Even so, that didn’t prevent new owners the Daily Pawn Shop from reverting the building to its original boring boxy look shortly after acquiring it.

Indeterminate Façade

BEST Products Indeterminate Facade 2a

BEST Products Indeterminate Facade 2b

Built in 1974-75, Indeterminate Façade was the second of SITE’s collaborations with Best Products and over time has emerged as the most famous. Located at 10765 Kingspoint Road in Houston, TX, the store started out as a standard large building but SITE artists then extended the outside walls unevenly to evoke a “distressed” appearance – the highlight of which was a waterfall of brick and masonry spilling onto the front awning.

BEST Products Indeterminate Facade 2c

BEST Products Indeterminate Facade 2d

Perhaps due to its notoriety, Indeterminate Façade remained unchanged through at least one change of ownership after Best Products declared bankruptcy for the final time. Sometime in 2003, however, the artistic extensions suddenly and mysteriously vanished. Some say the building’s owner heard rumors the City of Houston was about to declare the structure to be of historical significance and feared losing the freedom to alter the building at will in the future.

The Notch Project

BEST Products Notch Project 1a

BEST Products Notch Project 1b

BEST Products Notch Project 1c

When a Best Products store at 1901 Arden Way in Sacramento, CA known as The Notch Project opened in 1977, balloons poured out of the gaping “notch” that appeared when the building’s 14ft high, 45-ton front corner wedge slid aside to reveal the main entrance. Each morning thereafter, the corner piece would slide aside and each day at closing time it would slide back into position – sans balloons, mind you.

BEST Products Notch Project 1d

After Best Products sold off its bricks & mortar assets, the former Notch Project building was bought by Best Buy – an infamously non-innovative corporation who’s directors dictated all its stores must conform to the corporate look. We’re sure you’ll agree that when it came to imaginative branding, Best Products bested Best Buy by far.

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The Peeling Project Thinking Outside The Big Box Store

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[ By Steve in Architecture & Offices & Commercial. ]

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Portfolio: Michel Lamoller’s space and time-bending tautochronos project

03 Aug

In his series ‘tautochronos’, Berlin-based artist and photographer Michel Lamoller takes multiple pictures of the same scene at different times, before physically combining the prints and using a scalpel to cut through the layers. In doing so, Lamoller’s ‘layerscapes’ offer a vision of time and space that would be impossible in a conventional single exposure. His work is hard to describe in words – click through to read our Q&A and take a look at his work. 

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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How To Finish the Photography Project You Started

28 May

It’s inevitable that, at some point, your motivation will lag on that photography project you started. Whether you’re working on a popular photography project, such as taking a photo every day for a year (the 365-day project), walking the streets shooting strangers (the 100-strangers project), or working on a custom project you dreamt up…no matter what, one day you can Continue Reading

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How To Start a Photography Project You’ll Love

09 Apr

Once called the “Jay-Z of documentary photography,” Martin Parr is known throughout the world for his absurd, colorful, yet tongue-in-cheek photographs of modern life. But if you asked him about his favorite shots, he wouldn’t mention individual photographs, instead he’d point you to photography projects. And if you want to improve your photo-taking skills, starting a project you love is a Continue Reading

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The Rotten Apple Project: Quick and Dirty Urban Hacks

05 Apr

[ By Steph in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

Rotten Apple Urban Hacks 1

Sometimes, a reclaimed piece of junk is all it takes to make a bus stop, bike rack, subway station or virtually any other urban setting more comfortable and fun. The Rotten Apple project consists of incredibly fast and cheap urban interventions that anyone can replicate in their own cities, from a simple hinged wooden board that turns a bike rack into a folding seat to improvised tools that transform scaffolding into a musical instrument.

Rotten Apple Urban Hacks 2

A piece of scrap wood and some chess pieces, fitted onto the top of a fire hydrant, becomes a public game board. An old, unused newspaper dispenser is a cold weather clothing bank with the addition of a sticker.

Rotten Apple Urban Hacks 3Commuters waiting on the bus have a place to hang their bags thanks to an old IKEA clothes hook added to a street sign. Other signs were modified into sidewalk tetherballs or double-height bike racks.

Rotten Apple Urban Hacks 4

Rotten Apple Urban Hacks 5

Magnetic boards on the subway platform aren’t just a fun way to pass the time, they can also brighten up someone’s day with a cheerful message. A window of an abandoned building, bricked up long ago, is a public bookshelf, and a sticker applied to an electric main notifies passersby that there’s an outlet hidden inside so they can charge their phones.

Rotten Apple Urban Hacks 6

The people who run Rotten Apple have chosen to remain anonymous, leaving only this quote from Victor Pananek as a clue to their motivations: “Design, if it is to be ecologically responsible and socially responsive, must be revolutionary and radical in the truest sense. It must dedicate itself to… maximum diversity with minimum inventory… or doing the most with the least.”

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[ By Steph in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

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30 Ideas to Jump-start Your Photo Theme Project

26 Mar

Variety, not only the spice of life, is also one of the most beautiful things about the art form of photography; the number of possible subjects for a photo is almost limitless.  There are formats, within forms and within disciplines, and all we need to create a work of art is an idea, which can come to us at any Continue Reading

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Google’s Project Tango camera specs revealed

15 Mar

tango-2.jpg

We recently reported on Project Tango, an initiative within Google’s Advanced Technology and Projects group (ATAP) that looks at 3D-mapping of spaces with smartphones. Today some additional detail about the phone’s camera specification was revealed on Myce.com through Google’s Chrome issue tracker. Learn more

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Using a Photography Project to Spark your Creativity

11 Mar

Get out there and create!

Hazmat Alan

Do a photography project for yourself

As photographers, it’s natural we all reach that point where we become a bit bored with our work, especially if you work on the same type of photography everyday. After thousands of landscapes and flower photos, you can start feeling that desire to do something different. Starting a personal photography project can help ignite that creative fire again.

Don’t sit around and wish you had creative projects to work on. Get out there and create exactly what you want! Working on personal projects allows you to think outside the box. It allows you to play by your own rules, where there are no rules! It’s just you and your own vision. There is great power in that.

Josh Burst

A project can help overcome a creative slump

Behindthescenes

A couple of years ago I was in a creative slump. I had been wanting to do a cohesive photo series but I didn’t know what the subject was going to be. I’ve heard the phrase time and time again, “Go with what you know.” So I got thinking about what inspires me. I knew it had to be a narrative driven project. I knew it was going to be something stylish and probably a bit dark. Then one day, as I was about to wake up, it came to me like a dream. It really did! A sci-fi horror series it was.

Even though I grew up in the 80′s, I found myself watching campy sci-fi shows from the 60′s and 70′s. I loved Lost in Space, Land of the Giants, The Twilight Zone and Star Trek. I was drawn to the unusual locations, the great costumes and bright colors of these shows. I also grew up watching a lot of horror films from the 70′s and 80′s. The abstract lighting and gorgeous sets of Dario Argento and the zombie takeovers from George Romero struck a chord with me. In my photo series, “Invasion” I would combine these two loved genres together.

Think outside the box and be resourceful

Before After

I wanted clones, mad scientists, abductions, robots, aliens, and bombshells in space suits. I hunted up costumes, searched for locations, gathered friends and then I started creating. I shot at friends’ houses that fit the 50′s and 60′s time period. I also found models and friends who were more than happy to be in a cool sci-fi photo. Since shooting in outer space was out of the question, I shot in my living room. Basically, I worked with what I had.

Dare to dream big

Deven faceToday it’s easier than ever to dream up anything you want for free or almost free. You can find great costumes and props in flea markets, at your local resale shop or even in a dumpster! Put ads out on craigslist for models or makeup artists. Use your friend’s house as a set. Take your camera out of auto mode and play around with settings. Maybe use a flashlight or the television as a light source instead. The possibilities are as unlimited as your imagination. Once you have a goal in mind, with a little bit of sweat and photoshop you’ll be amazed at what you can dream up!

This Sci-fi inspired photo series has been the most rewarding project I’ve ever worked on. It’s been an incredible learning experience. I also believe “Invasion” is my strongest and most original photography that I have ever done. I contribute that to the fact that I went with what I knew, and channeled what I was interested in and passionate about. I challenge you to do the same and most important have fun doing it!

Marva2

Here are some other ideas on starting a photography project:

  • Photography projects that make you feel alive
  • Jumpstart Your Photography: Start a 365 Project
  • Lost your Photo Mojo? Ten Tips to Bring Back the Magic

Have some other tips or ideas, please share in the comments! If you’ve done a project, or started one recently – tell us about it!

 

The post Using a Photography Project to Spark your Creativity by Patrick McPheron appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Kickstarter project seeks funding for ‘Stubilizer’ GoPro mount

09 Mar

stubilizers.jpg

When you’re an inventor, you get to put your name on whatever it is you invent. That’s the rule. Hence, the RockSolid Stubilizer. Dreamed up by extreme sports junkie Stuart Smith, the Stubilizer – a GoPro-compatible, plug-and-play image stabilizer – is currently seeking funding through Kickstarter to reach production. The Stubilizer uses brushless motor gimbal technology to minimize shake on up to three axis. Learn more

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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