Archive for the 'Film' Category

Great Time Lapse of Baylor Homecoming

My friend Robbie Rogers put this wonderful time lapse together of the Baylor Homecoming. It thing it is a great example of capturing the spirit of an event in a unique way.

Homecoming 2009 from Baylor Photography on Vimeo.

Enjoy this time lapse featuring highlights from Baylor’s Homecoming week shown in about two minutes. Photographers include Robert Rogers, Matthew Minard and Matthew Pompa of Baylor Photography. Thanks to Jerry Ward and David Carlson with Canon USA for technical assistance. Also, thanks to Baylor Facilities for their help with arranging access to the various locations. Most of all…thanks to the Baylor family for their contributions to a great 100th Homecoming celebration!

New York Now and Then David P. Dunlap


David W. Dunlap/The New York Times

This is from Dunlap about the NYTimes series

The Brooklyn Bridge The walkway across the bridge was not divided into lanes for walkers and bikers in 1978. The financial district looks much the same, save for the absence of the twin towers.

Mind you, I didn’t set out to take vintage photos.

The assignment in 1978 was simply to illustrate “The City Observed: New York,” a guidebook to Manhattan by Paul Goldberger, who was then the architecture critic for The New York Times. (He is now the architecture critic for The New Yorker.) Paul instructed me to keep the pictures straightforward, documentary and as free of optical distortion as possible. He handed me a carbon copy of his manuscript as my guide, and off I went, with my Nikons and Plus-X film.

Because I can still remember what the weather was like on the days I took these pictures, what the city sounded and smelled like, I was startled to look through my contact sheets recently and realize how much Manhattan had changed. New York did not just crawl out of its near-collapse in the mid-70s, it had boomed almost without interruption. Towers were inserted. Landmarks were deleted. And even in cityscapes that looked unchanged, I knew that far wealthier occupants — residential and commercial — could now be found behind familiar old facades.

My editors and I thought that pairing photos from then and now would be a graphic way to examine the phenomenon of urban churn that so defines this city. The series will visit a dozen or so neighborhoods, uptown and downtown, before the end of 2008. Each diptych tells its own tale, but the overall story is clear: It doesn’t take much longer than a generation for New York to regenerate itself completely. DAVID W. DUNLAP

Follow this link to view these and other pairs in an interesting embedded Flash application.

Out of this World Images

The Spirit of Halloween Lives On as a Dead Star Creates Celestial Havoc

aldrin on moon

nasa images

Get lost in the NASA Image Archive. You can spend hours viewing the images on this site.

“NASA Images is a service of Internet Archive ( www.archive.org ), a non-profit library, to offer public access to NASA’s images, videos and audio collections. NASA Images is constantly growing with the addition of current media from NASA as well as newly digitized media from the archives of the NASA Centers.

The goal of NASA Images is to increase our understanding of the earth, our solar system and the universe beyond in order to benefit humanity.”  Quoted frrom NASA Images.

{via metafilter}

The Gigapan

gigapan New York Yankees Stadium Panorama

gigapan New York Yankees Stadium Panorama
This is a detail of the larger image, belive it or not. How is it done? gigapan camera mount
The Gigapan mount above, read on from the Gigapan website.

We are beta-testing prototypes of the Gigapan robotic mount, which attaches to your small digital camera to create a fast and easy-to-use high-resolution panorama capture device. We are growing the beta process and are negotiating concerning general release and sales of the Gigapan camera. You will be able to purchase these low-cost robotic mounts and take several hundred or thousand images at a time to create panoramas with one billion pixels and more.

You don’t need specialized GigaPan hardware to take your own panoramas. If you have lots of patience, a high-quality digital camera, and a good tripod (or very steady hand!) you can take hundreds or thousands of overlapping, zoomed-in pictures for a gigapixel-scale panorama, then use off-the-shelf stitching software to combine the images into one very high-resolution panorama for upload.

{via NYTimes}

Can Polaroid Be Saved by You?

Save Polaroid

Can you save an aging American photographic film company? If you have hundreds of millions of dollars you can be the owner of a wonderful technology that has lived a wonderful life. You have the oppertunity to nurture this product into the old age home.

For a 5 minute history of the company and where it is now watch this video by photographer Michael Blanchard.

But seriously… I love Polaroid film. But, that said I have not used it for several years now. I do have friends that use it as a mainstay of their work. There is my friend Ellen Carey, she has used the Polaroid 20×24 camera for some wonderful work over the years. I don’t know what she and her fine art peers will do.

So what can you do if you don’t have the millions needed to save the company? Go to http://www.savepolaroid.com/ and send a letter in a campaign to get Fuji Film or Illford to license the Polaroid technology.

World’s Oldest Photographic Lab, Discovered

oldest darkroom, Petiot-Groffier
oldest darkroom, Petiot-Groffier

The discovery of the World’s Oldest Photographic Lab opens the door to Petiot-Groffier’s photography darkroom, closed for 152 years. Complete with cameras, chemicals sealed in glass bottles, and notebooks for processing and printing Daguerrotypes and Collodions. The room was revealed when the building changed hands and the new owner entrusted Pierre-Yves Mahé, the initiator of the Niépce House in Saint-Loup de Varennes, France, to preserve and protect the long hidden treasures.

photos Pierre-Yves Mahé

Romancing the “Darkroom” by Michel Campeau

darkroom campeau darkroom campeau
darkroom campeau

“For a photographer like myself, who in fact has not worked in a darkroom for over years, these images are horribly familiar. Those fix stains in the sink, the eerie red light, reminiscent of a brothel, the wonky enlarger and a profusion of different tapes holding the whole thing together. . . I feel lucky to have escaped and yet there is something very alluring about these images. . .” — from the introduction by Martin Parr

View the photosBuy the book.

{via darius himes}

Robert Capa, Mexican Suitcase Lost and Found

Robert CapaRobert CapaRobert Capa

“The Falling Soldier” by Robert Capa

The discovery has sent shock waves through the photography world, not least because it is hoped that the negatives could settle once and for all a question that has dogged Capa’s legacy: whether what may be his most famous picture — and one of the most famous war photographs of all time — was staged. Known as “The Falling Soldier,” it shows a Spanish Republican militiaman reeling backward at what appears to be the instant a bullet strikes his chest or head on a hillside near Córdoba in 1936. When the picture was first published in the French magazine Vu, it created a sensation and helped crystallize support for the Republican cause.” Quoted from the New York Times

Bill Viola Talks

Revealing interview with Bill Viola and several others at Youtube.com. Interview and video at designboom.com.{via designboom}

Film Titles of Saul Bass

A favorite. The Film Titles of Saul Bass span some of the great films by Hitchcock, Otto Preminger, to Martin Scorsese. Including films like The Man With The Golden Arm, Psycho, and Casino. Be sure to click on a movie title from the green list to get the full effect.

Casino Still

http://www.notcoming.com/saulbass/index2.php