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Museums of Tomorrow: 13 Out of This World Institution Designs

24 Dec

[ By Steph in Architecture & Public & Institutional. ]

future museums comic 4

We’re reaching a point in architectural history where the structures being built look like they could have come straight out of the concept artwork for a science fiction movie, or a video game set on another planet. Some look like flying saucers, others look like blobby aliens that landed on the roof of a traditional European building, but all of these museum designs – the real ones, and the ones that will remain concepts – have a strikingly futuristic feel.

Sci-Fi Museum for Washington by Flying Architecture
future museums sci fi

future museums sci fi 2

future museums sci fi 3

This concept looks just as sci-fi as its purpose with its facade wrapped in sharp-looking metal panels and ring-shaped interior plan. Submitted for an International Architectural Design Competition to design a museum for science fiction in Washington, the proposal is “a vessel of science fiction history and culture” with circular LED screens wrapping the inner face and space reserved for hologram performances.

MVRDV China Comic and Animation Museum
future museums comic

future museums comic 2

future museums comic 3

What looks like a gigantic cluster of textured eggs speckled in red houses a Comic and Animation Museum for China by MVRDV, including a massive comic book library, three cinemas and an interactive exhibition zone. MVRDV’s competition-winning design mimics the shape of speech bubbles for its eight interconnected ovoid volumes fulfilling every comic book lover’s fantasy.

Museum of the Future for Dubai
future museums dubai

future museums dubai 2

future museums dubai 3

This metallic ring-shaped building designed by architect Shaun Killa and set to be 3D-printed for its completion in 2017 looks like the kind of building an artist would envision for an alien planet. The flashy building will be covered in poetry written by Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the hole in its center representing “the unknown.” The exhibits will be changed every six months.

Kunsthaus Graz Art Museum
future museums kunst

future museums kunst 2

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future museums kunst 4

Is this a building, or an alien ship? The blobular Kunsthaus Graz Art Museum is an ultramodern landmark in the Austrian city of Graz by Sir Peter Cook and Colin Fournier, known to locals as the “friendly alien” That flowing roof is actually made up of 1,288 semitransparent acrylic glass panels generating energy with built-in photovoltaic cells.

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Museums Of Tomorrow 13 Out Of This World Institution Designs

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[ By Steph in Architecture & Public & Institutional. ]

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Take your Composition & Lighting Skills to the Next Level with this 70% Off Deal

18 Dec

It’s time for day 6 of our 12 Deals of Christmas and this one is from our good friends at Photography Concentrate who have two fantastic eBooks for you to choose from (and a great offer when you pick them both up).

Concentrate ebooks

Incredibly Important Composition Skills

Are you ready to unlock your superpowers in composition and gain real skills that you’ll use in every single shot you take?

Save 60% on this ebook and video guide from Photography Concentrate (and get a bonus Printable Field Guide and 7 bonus teaching videos)!

Fantastic Fundamental Light Skills

When you understand why light looks and behaves the way it does, you’ll know how to control and change it to suit your creative vision – and take better photos.

Save 60% today on this comprehensive guide (and get a bonus Printable Field Guide)!

Bundle Them Together

Grab both Incredibly Important Composition Skills and Fantastic Fundamental Light Skills in this amazing combo deal (with all the bonuses mentioned above).

A HUGE 70% OFF for 24 hours only!

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The post Take your Composition & Lighting Skills to the Next Level with this 70% Off Deal by Darren Rowse appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Discover the Secrets of Natural Light Photography With This 70% Off Deal

13 Dec

As we announced yesterday – today is Day 1 in our 12 Deals of Christmas dPS – and we’re kicking things off with fantastic deals on or popular Natural Light eBooks.

You can pick either one up for $ 7 (65% off) or grab them both for an even more amazing price of just $ 12 USD (a 70% saving).

PicMonkey Collage

The eBooks are:

  • Natural Light: Mastering a Photographer’s Most Powerful Tool – by travel photographer Mitchell Kanashkevich
  • Life in Natural Light: The Ultimate Guide Guide for Photographers – by family photographer Rachel Devine

These eBooks are normally $ 19.99 – today only either one is $ 7 USD!

Both of these beautifully illustrated and informative eBooks tackle this vitally important topic for photographers from different perspectives but together they make a beautiful little bundle of learning for just $ 12 (70% off).

Taking beautiful photos using nothing but the light around you can often seem as difficult as using the Jedi Mind Trick to get the people in your lens to sit still. But these two books will help you see your photography in… well…. a whole new light.

We could go on about these eBooks all day but this deal only lasts 24 hours so head to our 12 Days of Christmas Page and grab yours before this deal is over.

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Fist-Bump This Crosswalk Signal to Get a Green Light

08 Oct

[ By Steph in Design & Guerilla Ads & Marketing. ]

walkbump 1

Pedestrians approaching a crosswalk button that has been modified with a silicone fist knew exactly what to do in order to get across the street. Anthropomorphizing a common urban fixture, designer duo Alfredo and Alberto make a walk through Los Angeles a lot more fun with nothing more than some silicone, glue and a #walkbump sticker printed with the simple instructions “fist bump to cross.”

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The designers captured video of pedestrians as they encountered the guerrilla installation. Nearly everybody seems game to play along, some snapping selfies. While the Spanish-born designers don’t explain exactly how they made it, all it likely took to create was taking a quick clay mold of the button for a seamless fit, and a separate one of a fist, casting them into one piece in an eye-catching yellow hue.

rotten apple 2

rotten apple 1

This ‘quick and dirty’ urban intervention calls to mind the Rotten Apple Project, a series of cheap projects that anyone can replicate in their own cities, from turning a bike rack into a folding seat to screwing coat hooks onto bus stop signs. This kind of active participation in how cities look and function – often without the permission of officials – can enliven public spaces, whether the installations are just for fun or create new uses for existing structures. Check out 12 more creative DIY urban interventions.

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Squeeze to Zoom: No Need to Fold this Egg-Shaped Analog Map

04 Sep

[ By WebUrbanist in Design & Products & Packaging. ]

egg shaped map design

Tapping into the natural expansion of a squeezable ball under pressure, this urban micro-globe provides both big-picture views and detailed streetscapes on one continuous surface.

squeeze color coded map

Hungarian designer Dénes Sátor created the rubber EggMap ball in response to both traditional paper maps and newer digital equivalents, wanting a to pack more information into less space without relying on external energy or connectivity.

squeeze eggmap zoom out

squeeze eggmap zoomed in

The spherical solution addresses classic issues with other geographical guides. Folding maps wear out over time, are susceptible to weather and conspicuous to examine publicly in unfamiliar places. Online maps may fail for lack of battery or internet.

squeeze map legend

Color-coded city sections let you easily spin and locate places on the map; a quick squeeze then reveals street names, specific locations and transit details (illustrated in the legend above).

squeeze to zoom map

squeeze ball egg map

Made to be robust and portable, the air-filled ball easily resists rain, wind, mud or snow and can be tossed in a pocket or backpack when not in use. And if you still manage to get lost, you can always throw it against the wall in anger – it will rebound.

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This is what it’s like to be dumped with fire retardant

15 Aug

DPReview’s home state of Washington has been hot and dry of late – severely so. As wild fires rage in the east of the state, local authorities are fighting to contain the flames and prevent property damage. KOMO News videographer Eric Jensen was in the town of Chelan today covering the evacuation, and captured some incredible footage of fire retardant being deployed from a low-flying aircraft. Click through to take a look

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Picture this: Our revamped galleries system is now live

11 Aug

Love our galleries of real-world sample images but hate our galleries interface? You’re not alone. We’ve been working on an improved system for uploading and displaying camera and lens samples for some time, and it’s finally ready for you to try out. Our new gallery viewer fixes several of the most frustrating problems with the old one, and introduces many new features including a loupe and one-click 100% view. Click through for a quick walkthrough

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Fault Creep: Tectonic Motion is Slowly Tearing this Town in Two

10 Jul

[ By WebUrbanist in Destinations & Sights & Travel. ]

fault creep angled view

Located along a tectonic fault, the town of Hollister, California, acts like an earthquake in slow motion, its surfaces slipping past one another along a ragged line visible in everything from skewed traffic lines and split sidewalks to entirely torqued houses.

fault creep skewed house

As Geoff Manaugh neatly summarizes on BldgBlog, “Hollister is an inhabitable catalog of misalignment and disorientation, bulging, bending, and blistering as it splits right down the middle.” Thanks to inexorable forces of geology at work far below, “The entire west half of Hollister is moving north along the Calaveras Fault, leaving its eastern streets behind.”

fault creep sidewalk bulge

Instead of the sudden and devastating motion we normally associate with earthquakes, Hollister suffers the movements of rocks below at more geological than human speeds, its buildings and infrastructure ever-so-slowly twisted through the passage of time. At a rate of one inch per five years, the change is not noticeable on a daily basis, but dramatic over the decades.

fault creep curb alignment

There are elements of Alice’s Wonderland all over the urban landscape: “Curbs at nearly the exact same spot on opposite sides of the street are popped out of alignment. Houses too young to show this level of wear stand oddly warped, torqued out of synch with their own foundations, their once strong frames off-kilter. The double yellow lines guiding traffic down a busy street suddenly bulge northward—as if the printing crew came to work drunk that day—before snapping back to their proper place a few feet later.”

distorted bridge

Manaugh also traveled to a nearby bridge in Parkfield where a road bridge spans the San Andreas Fault, its distortions the ultimate manifestation of fault creep as each anchored side moves in the opposite direction. Built straight across, curves are already visible as one sights along the structure.

fault creep curved bridge

His photos here and elsewhere capture many of the region’s “minor landmarks for the seismic tourist,” which, “for all their near-invisibility, visiting can still provide a mind-altering experience.” All images by Geoff Manaugh.

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Become a Composition Master with This Great Guide: 60% Off Today Only

03 Jul

Deal #2 in our massive Mid Year Sale has just gone live – and it’s a goodie!

Iics hero shot discount

Today only you get 60% off Photography Concentrate’s Incredibly Important Composition Skills.

For the next 24 hours and only $ 19.98 (an exclusive dPS price), you’ll get:

  • A comprehensive 225-page ebook — filled with everything you need to know to come away with a deep understanding of composition and the practical know-how to put it to good use
  • 7 bonus videos — looking at examples of theories and techniques and how they influence the look and feel of each photograph, to bring all the concepts covered together
  • A printable pocket field guide — with the most essential composition information laid out, for you to print out, fold up and slip in your camera bag

Check out the video on the Photography Concentrate site to meet Lauren, the author of this tutorial, and learn more about how Incredibly Important Composition Skills will totally transform your photography!

Composition

This deal is an unbelievable amount of value.

Especially because building your composition skills is one of the fastest and most lasting ways to transform the quality of your images.

You see, people view images in predictable ways. And when you discover these patterns, you can use them to your advantage to create photographs that best communicate your desired message.

So are you ready to become a master in composition and gain real skills that you’ll use in every single shot you take?

Head to Photography Concentrate to snap up this amazing deal!

No Risk: Your Satisfaction is Guaranteed

Your satisfaction with this deal is guaranteed. For a full 60 Days, and if you don’t feel like you have stronger composition skills you’ll get 100% of your money back with no questions asked.

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Take this Picture of the Day Project to Practice and Help You Grow as a Photographer

26 Jun
Sunset

Sunset on Long Beach Island (NJ)

I watched the future football Hall of Fame quarterbacks practicing on the sidelines just before the Super Bowl. Although they had thrown the football perhaps millions of times before, they were practicing their throwing before the big game. They believe in the old (but true) saying, “Practice makes perfect.”

It’s important for us as photographers to continually practice our skills as well. Although we may have pressed the shutter button a million times, we need to be sure that we are always “ready for the big game”. Like the Super Bowl quarterbacks, it is important that we keep practicing our skills; whether we are professionals, aspiring professionals, or enthusiasts.

Why Practice?

Old Barney

Old Barney lighthouse in Barnegat Light, NJ

Although practice does not make perfect (we can practice doing things the wrong way), it does make our techniques more natural, and more permanent. For example, using back-button focus on my camera the first time seemed strange to me, but after practicing it over and over, it become an automatic technique that I use without even thinking about it. It’s a challenge to try turning off your brightly lit LED display on your camera once the theatre is darkened, but with practice it’s an automatic, and easy process.

Practice not only gives us a chance to make our shooting techniques more automatic, it gives us a chance to try new techniques. Practice gives us an opportunity to learn new poses, try a new lenses, or try a new post-processing technique to enhance our photographs before we use them in a client shoot. As a photographer, learning never stops; practice is a good way to try out things with no pressure or fear of failure.

Maybe I’ll Practice Tomorrow

Unless we are full time photographers or we have the luxury of having the time to shoot whenever we want, finding time to practice can be a challenge. Life is busy; there are so many things that need to be done that we are sometimes tempted to say, “Maybe I’ll practice tomorrow.” Sometime we need motivation to force us to make the effort, despite other things that may get in the way, to practice our photography techniques.

Picture of the Day

Clyde

If someone asked me what the biggest thing was that has helped me to improve my photography skills, I would have to say that it was my commitment to what I call the Picture of the Day. A little more than a year ago I started trading photographs that I took with my sister who is a photography enthusiast. Very quickly that practice spread to other family members and friends. Today, I send a new photograph to more than a hundred people every morning. The list continues to grow. But it’s not the number of people that receive the Picture of the Day that is the motivator, it’s the commitment to taking, and sending the picture, that benefits me as a photographer.

Even though my photography business focuses mainly on people (weddings, portraits and events); my Picture of the Day photos may include people, animals, architecture and landscapes. People that receive my Picture of the Day have commented that opening my morning email is like opening a box of chocolates because “you never know what you’re going to get”. Sometimes my pictures are not meant to be works of art, but rather just funny, like the shot of my dog Clyde (above), sitting by the dinner table with his sunglasses on, waiting for dinner. The zoo is always a great place to take pictures, so I make that part of my list of places to shoot.

Jaguar

Jaguar at the Elmwood Park Zoo (Norristown, PA)

Admittedly, I shoot most days, but not every day. I make time during the week to practice shooting; I am committed to take that time despite everything else. I have my camera with me most of the time, and many of my shots are unplanned. I stockpile the shots so that I always have a reserve of pictures to use for my morning emails.

How has the Picture of the Day Helped Me?

My commitment to the Picture of the Day has helped me to grow as a photographer more than anything, including the following:

Kids and Mom

Four month old lion cubs with mom (Philadelphia Zoo)

  • Knowing that I need a new picture every day motivates me to get out and shoot, even if I am not shooting the things that my business is focused on.
  • Knowing that my Picture of the Day needs to be different than all of those that I previously sent out, motivates me to try new techniques and to look at things more creatively. That has helped me to start thinking out-of-the-box and has greatly expanded my composure skills for when I am shooting weddings or portraits for clients.
  • Shooting for the Picture of the Day has given me the opportunity to try and to practice with new lenses and filters, so that when the time comes to use them in a business shoot, I am ready.
  • My Picture of the Day has enabled my business to grow, as people that receive my email every morning are reminded that I am in the photography business. I can’t think of a more effective, less costly marketing tool.
  • Lastly, shooting for my Picture of the Day has been just plain fun!!!

Make the Commitment Today

Nina and Pinta

Nina and Pinta replicas at visit to Viking Village (Barnegat Light, NJ)

If you are not just a picture snapper, but rather, serious about photography – make the commitment to start your own Picture of the Day project today. Like mine, it can start small and grow over time (I had only one person on my list initially.) I sometimes post my Picture of the Day on my personal Facebook page which adds more visibility to my work. This visibility also adds to my list of people that subscribe to my Picture of the Day.

How do you practice your photography?

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