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I have....
I was tidying the border in my client's garden - dead leaves etc, when suddenly I realised something is odd in there... something is moving!
I uncovered a hibernating hedgehog! I put the leaves back, went to get my camera - uncovered it, few shots - and covered it with leaves again...
good thing I was using small hand rake as the space was limited ;-)
There is another pile in another border that doesn't look natural (too rounded - and I am sure I've tidied it before winter) - so will investigate it next time...
what a lovely experience :)))
67. Pointed
On my way back from an errand at my job's client's office in Chelsea, just a few subway stops away.
(Nice) summer afternoon
NYC - Manhattan
Found this beauty in one of my client's front yard. I just had to stop and pop off a few shots. I have no idea what it's called but I like how the buds look like tiny, tiny tulips. Each flower is about a quarter inch in size. And once all the buds open, the flower forms a circle. Like a globe.
Explore #34
7 days
Had to go to a client's house today for some newborn pics...usually they come to my studio. They had a nice big window...so I used it. It was a nice change of pace from my studio lights, but way out of my comfort zone! ;)
24-70L
natural light.
Ashridge House is a beautiful property hidden away within the Ashridge Estate, surrounded by woodlands of oak and beech in the rolling Chiltern Hills. The majestic double helical solid oak and steel staircase exemplifies the grandeur of the property and reflects the breathtaking beauty of its natural surroundings.
The organic design comprises two curved staircases including oak strings, treads, risers, apron boards and handrails with a matching gallery. The lower stair has curved entry treads with 2D risers and is flared out with handrail volutes on both sides, giving an impression of natural elegance.
However, it is the balustrades of steel spindles flanking the stairs on both sides which make this staircase something truly special. The delicate curved lines of the painted steel are something of an optical illusion, creating the unique sensation that the balustrade is rippling in exquisite waves as you pass by.
The concept and design grew from a seed of an idea from the client in the form of a hand-drawn sketch and pullout from a magazine. Kevala Stars team then worked closely with the client and their architect to nurture this initial idea into the unique staircase that exists today. Retaining the original concept, yet interpreting the design to fit the feature into the available space, Kevala Stairs thus successfully fulfilled the client’s aspirations.
I was playing with the collage feature on "Picmonkey" today and made this using some of my client's pics. (past and present) Even though I don't use Picmonkey that much anymore I still love their collage maker. I prefer "iPiccy" for everything else.
After: White Zircon (Mozambique). 2.75ct, 6.87x8.95x5.12mm. Heated. EC1. Hexomni Oval 1.33. (Zir1105)
Heated to near-colorless at client's request.
Polaroid Big Swinger Model 3000
Atelier Ying, Nyc.
The client is a director of a well-known Canadian fishing association who has traveled to Europe on fly fishing expeditions. He enjoys cigars and scotch during his frequent trips.
The main task was to try to understand both the character of the client and the camera subject so that I could invent an alter ego. The client's British background helped me to locate a suitable structure and detail for his camera. Being an avid fisherman as well as a film luddite added to the personality detail that I was looking for to settle the design. His camera, a Polaroid Swinger Model 3000 was an odd and attractive canvas, very well suited to modification. The featureless gray body made a good contrast to the rich appointments of the interior and was crucial for allowing the eye to simply rest after seeing the completely renovated interior. This is necessary and is an important design feature that I wish to point out; that of letting the eyes rest on something, like an empty wall or the side of a building. This feature isn't normally part of my other designs but I relished the chance to show it off.
This very green camera design takes its initial inspiration from London's Bath Club on Brook Street, there since 1959, and one of a dying breed of traditional British gentlemen's clubs of the past century. An unusual feature is that one of the Bath Club's many rooms is set aside for the venerable but much smaller Flyfisher's Club.
Aside from this Polaroid Land camera's offbeat name and dull grey exterior, its interior is made into an annex to that famous club room and is the world's tiniest member-supported gentlemen's club. It is grandfathered with a dual membership to its owner for the other two London clubs as well.
This club offers a constant supply of Cuban Cohiba mini cigars, box aged at least 8 months. Two of these are kept humidified at any single time inside the camera.
The faux-concrete lightwell in the style of one of Tadao Ando's museums allows the photographer the vicarious experience of descending a series of winding paths into the underbelly of the camera to view the club's collection of fishing equipment, mimicking a feature of the London club. However, the London counterpart never had such an ingenious front entrance. The cigars are each banded with a commemorative club label and are stored also under the same dark theme of an aging cellar.
The lightwell's winding paths are lined with site specific moss, garnering for the club many deductions for going green. This moss garden is hydroponic and a plastic cover (not shown in the photo) keeps a good humidity that extends down by small tubing to keep the cigars humidified. A maintenance set is provided to hydrate the garden by osmosis through a tube with a wick in it.
The club's equally prominent rear entrance is a flat arch. The Intrados is formed by the display cases which hold the client's personal collection of 20 antique fly fishing lures, each meticulously labelled in flowing red script.
Opening the camera back reveals the Impost of this quasi-arch, covered with a rich luxurious leather and embossed with the original Flyfisher Club's Latin motto.
This Polaroid would have to be digitized in order to provide the necessary extra space for the renovation. The digital modification is straightforward and is similar to my other camera modifications.
This design drawing and camera modification are copyright by David Lo, 2013
These cookies were made for a friend/client's children to give to their class mates. They are my first proper attempt at royal icing floodwork (I usually do mostly fondant).
When I originally had the idea to do faces on Christmas trees, I went hunting for similar cookies. I searched something like "Christmas tree cookies" and started looking. Several pages in I still had yet to find a tree with a face. I got excited that maybe, I had an original idea so I kept looking. I got 15 pages in before I finally found a christmas tree shaped cookie with a face (nothing like mine). I guess the search for the illusive original idea continues...
This is one of many many photos I took last week celebrating a friend/client's 20 year wedding anniversary. We were blessed with a gorgeous sunset and I made sure to take full advantage of that moment!
This is the first sitting of my client's AMAZING octopus tattoo. She said she wanted it's arms wrapping all around her arm in a sleeve, and it looks unreal good. Victor helped me place it, it took three different stencils to capture the whole image it's so mega-huge.
A set of custom LEGO minifigures I created for a commission based on the client's original elf characters. Enjoy!
After calling a client's family to find out where they got the animals, I went and bought a couple for myself. This photograph is for one of my groups and the assignment was to "shoot the photographer". So I decided to have a little bit of fun with the assignment! LOL!
Cue the song of the day:
"Kodachrome
They give us those nice bright colors
They give us the greens of summers
Makes you think all the world's a sunny day, Oh yeah
I got a Nikon camera
I love to take a photograph
So mama don't take my Kodachrome away."
Song: Kodachrome
Artist: Paul Simon
Photograph © 2009 White Shadow Photography. All Rights Reserved. This photograph should not be used on websites,blogs or anywhere for that matter without my explicit written permission. Please don't steal my photos, it isn't nice!
Room Lift is an interior design business that specializes in re-designing one room, while utilizing as much of their client's furnishings and decor as possible.
.....a hydrangea seen in my client's garden last week!
Happy Back to school to all the students of the world!
its raining today in Victoria! :~{
off for my Tuesday morning walk with the ladies who walk the beaches....
I made this for one of my client's hubby. It's huge! 45cm long!
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The Farmers Market opened this week in the River Market area of downtown Little Rock and runs all summer long. I just happened to be downtown at a client's office and went over at lunch to eat at one of the local restaurants. I noticed this vendor chatting, laughing and talking to everyone who would listen as he sold his strawberries. It's great to love your job.
ODC ~ Work
I noticed bit of algae growing already in my client's pond today, so started to clean it with the net. To my surprise I noticed a little head sticking out of the green mass... gently dug her out, put her on the stone at the edge of the pond, but she seemed to be too stressed to move by herself... so gentle push did a trick, lol
Very pregnant (?) Newt. Her younger collegue (with the yellow belly) was very eager to go back on his own, lol.
60/366
Test shots before the clients arrive, he is just dying to take some photos with the client's baby girl !
Mando entering the Client's base on Navarro. The Mandalorian Season 2 project was released first, but we definitely made this one first.
This Landscaping was a seasonal update for a client on a 16,384m parcel. It boasts a movie area, secret garden, a family recreation area and tucked away nooks for relaxation and privacy.
The Pictures were taken by the talented Kazn Xoxo and you can find more of his work here www.flickr.com/photos/motifated
Little white-breasted nuthatch posing like a champ for me. I pulled into a client's driveway and he landed here about 5 feet to my left. Shot him right from the driver's seat.
© All Rights Reserved.
Tom Von Lucky is one of Belgium's best known tattoo artists with a studio in Antwerp. He had just been working on this client's arms when I dropped by -- a work in progress.
this is our client's souped-up panel van, that will be touring round australia come november in aid of raising awareness for male mental- and physical-related illnesses.
grow a mo' in november for charity
Shot for my client's portfolio. Three flash frames and one ambient. Speelight handheld in near leftWWC joint, another above the tub bounced into WC joint above window, and a third frame bounced above the camera to get some more light on the floor in the foreground. Ambient brushed in for some pleasing shadows around the tub and ladder rack. Blended in PS and finished in Nik. CC always appreciated!
Today I photographed a client's installation at the Oakridge Mall on Cambie and 41st. There were giant red velvet donuts sprinkled with cinnamon suspended from the glass ceiling, with delicious crimson taffy melting and dripping gracefully from the walls, and everywhere there were tall cones of wispy, green cotton-candies garnished with small bundles of sweet red berries and golden bonbons on tiny sticks.
Wait a minute, those aren’t donuts and candies!…. This is Ho-ho-horrible. Christmas has once again, crept up on me. Happy Holidays, everyone!
In late August of 1983, our family took a hastily-planned vacation trip to France and Italy, which began with a few days in Paris to de-jetlag, before renting a car and driving across France, and then down through Italy to Venice.
While in Paris, we went out for some walks through a mostly-empty city, and happened upon this small playground on Blvd. St. Germain. Our sons were relatively young at that point (3 and 6), so they enjoyed the opportunity to bounce around on a little coiled-spring horse that can be seen in one of the other Flickr photos in this set....
Over the years, the horse has been replaced -- but obviously the park is still here.... and while there are still children who come to play on the small rides and toys, it seems that during the week, the park's primary use is to serve as a quiet sanctuary for local office workers to enjoy a quiet lunch, and to read a book...
If you're a family member, you can access this 1983 Flickr photo to see what David and Jamie looked like while they were riding on this same little horse:
www.flickr.com/photos/yourdon/12132945746/in/set-72157640...
This is one of approx 260 photos that I decided were not so bad that I had to delete them and recover every wasted binary bit of storage on my computer disk ... but also not good enough to warrant uploading to Flickr as a "public" photo.
Since Flickr now provides so much storage to us picture-crazed photographers, I've decided to upload all of these "random pix" as restricted "friends and family" photos so that most of the world doesn't have to suffer through them ...
I've cropped and edited these photos, but have not gone to the additional trouble of geo-tagging them ... sorry about that.
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In the spring of 2014, we came to Paris for a week of relaxed vacationing, mostly to wander around and see some old familiar places. It was a “return” trip for both of us, though in my case I think it’s probably been more than 15 years since I was even here on a business trip.
Business trips to any city don’t really count as a “visit” -- since they basically involve flying into a busy airport at night, taking a taxi to a generic business-traveler’s hotel (a Hilton in Paris looks just like a Hilton in Cairo), and then spending several days working in the hotel (if the purpose of the trip was a seminar or computer conference), or at a client’s office (also “generic” in most cases — you can’t even tell what floor you’re on when you get off the elevator, because every floor of “open office” layouts is the same). The trip usually ends in the late afternoon or evening of the final day, with a mad dash back to the airport to catch the last plane home to NYC. Thus, a business trip to Paris is almost indistinguishable from a business trip to Omaha. Or Albany. Or Tokyo.
But I did make a few “personal” visits to Paris in the 1970s and 1980s, so I looked forward to having the chance to walk through some familiar places along the Left Bank. I’m not so interested in museums, monuments, cathedrals, or other “official” tourist spots (but yes, I have been to the Eiffel Tower, just as I’ve been to the Empire State Building in NYC), so you won’t see any photos of those places in this Flickr set.
As a photographer, I now concentrate mostly on people and street scenes. The details of the location don’t matter much to me, though I do try to geotag my photos whenever I can. But for the most part, what you’ll see here are scenes of people and local things in Paris that made me smile as I walked around …
Commissioned wall-hanging
18"
Tempered and transparent glasses, raku pottery, smalti, ceramic, and client's stained glass and crockery
Beautiful handmade buttoned fetish wear. Made to the client's designs. If you are interested in having your fantasy button outfits become reality then contact the group moderator (creativeurope) for more details.
This Downy Woodpecker isn't shy at all. He let me walk right up to the feeder to get this photo, taken at a client's garden, in Surrey BC Canada.
Change of scenery - a work shot from last week - client's female Angus cattle sale in Victoria - pre-sale getting a few shots when this mum (cow) decided junior needed an ear clean!
Biczzz's amazing Shelby Cobra, reverse-engineered (with permission) as a commissioned project. (Image obscured at client's request.)