Tag Archive for 'photo'

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}

What 2,485 Days Looks Like

I just love seeing photos that tell stories in pairs. There is so much to consider here. Read the story below.

max gerber
max gerber
photos: Max Gerber

a few weeks ago dylan’s mother called me to say that everyone wanted to do an update to our mirror picture from 2001 that’s in the hearts book. it turns out dylan and his family were going to be visiting mario in camarillo on memorial day and we took that as a perfect opportunity to duplicate our previous efforts. it’s funny to see the difference – amazing, and funny and strange…

Read more at Max Gerber

San-Zhr Pod Village, Ghosts halted Completion

San-Zhr Pod Village

San-Zhr Pod Village

San-Zhr Pod Village, by photographer Craig Ferguson, is a project that features images of an abandoned pod development in the small Taiwanese town of San-zhr. These images have a post-apocalyptic flavor that seem like they are right out of a dystopian novel, and as Craig explains, the truth is no less bizarre: “I first heard about this [place] a couple of years ago, but it was only recently that I was able to get out there. The complex was left in its unfinished state because no amount of redevelopment will bring people to the area due to superstitions about ghosts, and it can’t be demolished because destroying the homes of spirits and lost souls is taboo in Asian culture.” We are glad that Craig braved the ominous warnings to produce these incredible images, and we think you will agree.

{via file magazine}

I love the work of Lucio Santos, on his blog. Below is Santos’ work on a “Cellular House. Lucio “Have you been to Taiwan lately?” I see some inspiration here.lucio santos cellular house

“Mudslide photo spurs look at logging practices”

erosion

{via jmcolberg}

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

Blood Simple Advertising

Red Cross ad

Red Cross ad

“Nothing grabs an audience’s attention more effectively than a clever optical illusion. Combine that with an ingenious ad campaign and you get this brilliant mobile billboard for The Red Cross, currently gracing the streets of San Francisco.

It’s photo journalism, meets Hollywood blockbuster movie poster, and it is turning plenty of heads wherever it parks itself. Enthusiastic onlookers have been snapping up photos of the mobile billboard and posting, uploading and sharing them online with friends. This is a brilliant example of how an audience can further promote the exposure of a great advertising campaign through mobile phones, blogs and sites such as flicker. ” quited from the coolhunter.net

The ad was created by Hal Rine.

{via thecoolhunter}

Forgotten, Detroit Book Depository

Detroit Public Schools Book Depository

Detroit Public Schools Book Depository

Detroit Public Schools Book Depository

The photos are copyright 2008, Sweet Juniper Media, Inc.

This is a building where our deeply-troubled public school system once stored its supplies, and then one day apparently walked away from it all, allowing everything to go to waste…All that’s left is an overwhelming sense of knowledge unlearned and untapped potential.”

{via metafilter}

QIU ZHEN, Chinese Photogapher

Qiu Zhen

Qiu Zhen

In October 2006, FotoFest International, China Hewlett Packard and a team of Chinese photographers and businessmen collaborated to create an international portfolio review program for Chinese photographers. Modeled on FotoFest’s portfolio review program in Houston, TX, the Meeting Place FotoFest Beijing was an unprecedented event in China. From 278 Chinese photographic artists, this web gallery presents 34 artists selected by participating reviewers.

Above, Quoted from Fotofestchina.

Qiu Zhen is just one of the may facinating Chinese photographers to view at the link below. I only wish there was some more information about Zhen on the site.

{via fotofest also see fotofest main site}

In other “News”, Levere IKEA Poster Hits the USA!

Nelson Tower Levere

Nelson Tower abbott

LEFT PHOTO, ABBOTT, SEVENTH AVENUE LOOKING SOUTH FROM 35TH STREET, MANHATTAN, 1935
RIGHT PHOTO, LEVERE, SEVENTH AVENUE LOOKING SOUTH FROM 35TH STREET, MANHATTAN, 2001

I guess this is only big news for me, but my Nelson Tower South image that is selling at IKEA is not not just available in the UK anymore. You can now find it at your local US IKEA. You will have to go to the store as yet it is not available online. Below, I have included a view of the pair of images as displayed in my book New York Changing rephotographed from. The Abbott on the Left and Levere on the Right.

Quentin Shih Photographer

Quentin ShihQuentin ShihQuentin Shih

A must view is the commercial photography work of Quentin Shih in China. It reminds me of the quality, excitement and creativity of work from New York City but from the Asian point of view.

Jonathan Harris’ Whale Hunt, Visual Story Telling

Whale Hunt

For seven straight days, Jonathan Harris took at least one photograph every five minutes on an Alaskan whale hunt. In the process, he may have reinvented how we tell stories. Magnificent.

I have to admit I did not get it the first time I viewed it. But now that I understand the concept I do enjoy the process of viewing this unique site. You have to go to the website to begin to understand what you are looking at above.

The Whale Hunt

{via design:related}

Love thy Neighbor

Photographer and author Steven Hirsch has photographed the homes of registered New York State sex offenders. Steven is both a wonderful writer and photographer. This work is chilling, alarming, beautiful. I get that Quentin Tarantino feeling of beauty and disgust. Look, noooo look away. The series of 24 images are on Steven’s website.

Steve Hirsh
Male • DOB December 24, 1958 • Forcibly touched a 14 year old female • Convicted June 8, 2006 • Sentenced to 1 year in jail • Recently moved to another town in the area

Steven Hirsh
Male • DOB November 2, 1957 • Actual deviate sexual Intercourse once with a 10 year old female • Convicted January 9, 1987 • Sentenced to 100 months to 25 years in state prison

Steven Hirsh
Male • DOB July 16, 1951 • Had actual deviate sexual intercourse with a 13 year old female. He used his hands, fist and a club during the attack • Convicted February 26, 1982 • Sentenced to 8 years to 16 years in state prison

Love Thy NeighborHomes of New York State Registered Sex OffendersFor anyone familiar with the work of Steven Hirsch, these pictures seem to be a radical departure from his style. At first glance.Technically flawless, quiet, without movement, uniform, they look to be documents of every day American life, with school lunches, baseball practice, bills and family. But not quite. They are too still, too ordinary. White aluminum siding, candy blue skies, trees with bark and branches in stark focus. A sign to “Support Our Troops”, tucked in near the fence on the ground, a school bus parked out in front. The windows are dull, hung with blinds or curtains, without a story.Ordinary.When our eyes drop down to the titles of the photos, we may recognize one or the other name of a sex offender from the headline news.Herein lies the link to other work of Steven Hirsch: the frame is slightly shifted, the twist of reality, eerie, unpredictable. Stirring up human ‘Angst’ and paranoia. The endless loneliness of strangers walking on New York streets is replicated in the faceless ordinariness of indistinguishable houses, some of which may have witnessed unspeakable horror and pain.The photos do not investigate, they document. It is up to the viewer to project their thoughts and ideas, to interpret.Steven Hirsch documents the surface. The image becomes a catalyst to the at times uncomfortable emotional experience the viewer brings to seeing.Our projections become superimposed on the visual image.Do we hate sex offenders, do we want them locked away forever, or do we empathize with a twisted soul who probably had a horribly abusive childhood himself.This is the true strength of Steven’s work: he makes us look at our world anew, with a fresh, uncomfortable eye.

Ina Becker
MD PhDAssistant
Clinical Professor of Psychiatry
Columbia University

{via i love photography}

Photographer, Edward Burtynsky

Burtynsky Tailings

Perhaps one of my favorite contemporary photographers is Edward Burtynsky.

In his own words:

Nature transformed through industry is a predominant theme in my work. I set course to intersect with a contemporary view of the great ages of man; from stone, to minerals, oil, transportation, silicon, and so on. To make these ideas visible I search for subjects that are rich in detail and scale yet open in their meaning. Recycling yards, mine tailings, quarries and refineries are all places that are outside of our normal experience, yet we partake of their output on a daily basis.These images are meant as metaphors to the dilemma of our modern existence; they search for a dialogue between attraction and repulsion, seduction and fear. We are drawn by desire – a chance at good living, yet we are consciously or unconsciously aware that the world is suffering for our success. Our dependence on nature to provide the materials for our consumption and our concern for the health of our planet sets us into an uneasy contradiction. For me, these images function as reflecting pools of our times.Edward Burtynsky

There is a documentary about him too. View the trailer here: