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Posts Tagged ‘Term’

Long Term Angle Parking: 12 Cool Cadillac Ranch Copies

01 Feb

[ By Steve in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

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The legendary Cadillac Ranch can’t be beat but it CAN be copied! These 12 tinny tributes to Amarillo’s angled auto art shift flattery into high gear.

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Cadillacs may be iconic symbols of those Fabulous Fifties but by the time the Space Age was in full flight, pop culture had ditched finned land barges in favor of “lowly” but well-loved VW Beetles. A half-century later, classic Bugs are a rare sight on America’s roads though you’ll find plenty at the Slug Bug Ranch in Conway, Texas! Kudos to Flickr users Jenny McG (thedefiningmoment), Kent Kanouse (Snap Man) and The Atomic Kid 1959 for bringing out the best in the Bug Ranch’s buried but be-dazzled Beetles!

Truckhenge, Boathenge, Bushenge…

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Lumping Ron Lessman’s varied automotive artworks into a “truckhenge” is rather all-inclusive – the Shawnee County, Kansas denizen has deployed a host of land and water craft in several distinct henges.

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According to The Vagabond Glovers’ Meanderings, “Shawnee County health and zoning officials got after him to clean up his yard, and when they told him to pick up his trucks, he decided to take their orders literally, and pick them up, then plant them back down in the ground the way he saw it done in Texas at Cadillac Ranch.” That’s tellin’ ’em, Ron!

Small Wonders

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Old and busted: car smashups. New hotness: Toy Mashups, which just happens to be where photographers Josh Cornish and Kyle Hillery snapped the above installation and its inspiration in May of 2012. Unlike the original Cadillac Ranch created by art collective Ant Farm (Chip Lord, Hudson Marquez and Doug Michels) and eclectic landowner Stanley Marsh 3 back in 1974, no backhoes were required to set the miniatures in place. Well, maybe a teeny tiny toy backhoe.

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Nice that both Miniatur Wunderland (c/o Knitrageous) in Hamburg, Germany and Un Petit Monde saw fit to apply graffiti to their scaled-down Cadillac Ranch tributes. It’s doubtful visitors to these installations will be allowed to personalize them, though.

Lying Solo

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Wow, Christine has really let herself go! Actually this is/was a 1960 Plymouth Fury while King’s krazed killer kar was a ’58 model. We’re not certain whether the vehicle’s owner had Cadillac Ranch in mind when he tilted this seemingly sharp Oldie But Goodie into its diagonal semi-grave but the finned beauty sure could use some company.

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Long Term Angle Parking 12 Cool Cadillac Ranch Copies

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[ By Steve in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

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Posted in Creativity

 

Photo Term Series #21: Dark-Frame Subtraction

05 Nov

 

Digital SLRs offer a function called Dark-Frame Subtraction usually called “Long Exposure Noise Reduction” or “High ISO Noise Reduction” in your camera’s settings menu. Dark-Frame Subtraction exposes a camera’s digital sensor less any external light for a matching duration of a photo taken to detect digital noise and electroluminescence. When the Dark-Frame Subtraction feature is active hot pixels, amp glow and other aberrations are subtracted from your photo. This feature works very well in most instances, but does tie up your camera limiting your ability to take a photo in quick succession. For example if you make a 2 minute exposure with this feature on, immediately after your exposure is completed another 2 minute exposure will be made to generate a dark-frame. A net total of 4 minutes will pass before you can review your photo or take another.

Dark-Frame Subtraction is a great thing to take advantage of if you have the time, patience and battery life.

For more on long exposures check out my ebook Photographing the 4th Dimension – Time

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Photo Term Series #21: Dark-Frame Subtraction

The post Photo Term Series #21: Dark-Frame Subtraction appeared first on JMG-Galleries – Landscape, Nature & Travel Photography.

       

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Posted in Equipment

 

Photo Term Series Post #20: Bokeh

31 Oct

One of the more interesting terms in photography is bokeh (pronounced bo-keh). Bokeh is the aesthetic quality of the blur in the out of focus portion of an image. The word is derived from the Japanese word boke meaning blur or haze.

Bokeh can be an important quality photographers evaluate when choosing a lens. This is particularly true when a photographer strives for non-distracting and smooth backgrounds. Nature, portrait and event photographers for example often make use of bokeh to isolate their subjects from busier backgrounds by choosing a smaller f/stop setting and thus a larger aperture. By choosing a smaller f/stop setting a photographer chooses to narrow the plane of focus and create a shallower depth of field. By having a shallower depth of field more of the photographed scene is then placed out of focus.

Copyright Jim M. Goldstein, All Rights Reserved

Photo Term Series Post #20: Bokeh

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Posted in Equipment

 

Google Chrome – Search a Term by Highlighting It, with Autocomplete

30 Oct

The “Highlight to Search (by Google)” extension to Google Chrome lets you search by highlighting text and clicking a pop-up magnifying glass.

Google Chrome users: when you see text on a web page that you would like to research further via Google, are you tired of copying the text and pasting it into the Address Bar? Or, even if you know that you can right-click selected text and choose “Search Google for”, wouldn’t it be nice to have Autocomplete features here so you can refine your search query?

The “Highlight to Search (by Google) extension offers an alternative way to search. After installation, all you need to do is highlight text on a webpage and a magnifying glass appears. Click it and a search box appears with AutoComplete features. Click on your term or a related one and a new tab appears with results of your search query from Google. It’s that easy….

Read more at MalekTips.
New Computer and Technology Help and Tips – MalekTips.Com

 
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Posted in Technology