View allAll Photos Tagged Dimensions
Explore #43, 11.10.2015
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Another view from the Rockefeller Center's "Top of the Rock" observatory deck, midtown Manhattan. This time the view is looking south toward the tip of the island with Brooklyn off in the distant left.
Serendipitously, this shot captured human beings in ambiguous positions regarding planes. Are they on the deck, reflections or images on billboards?
An underlying theme of my work is the quantum view of reality being the result of choices we make out a forest of possibilities. With my fragmenting up of the picture plane I suggest the simultaneous appearances of several realities or potentialities all at once.
Perhaps this is how we see the world initially, but our brains are designed to make the one choice and eliminate perception of the others for the sake of our safe navigation.
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View Large on Black.
© Richard S Warner ( Visionheart ) - 2015. All Rights Reserved. This image is not for use in any form without explicit, express, written permission.
My first attempt with double exposure. Urban space tends to be arranged and structured in a way that affects how a city functions. Using previous photos from my cityscape archive, I wanted to illustrate the abstract and multiple layers that are associated with the realm of urban space. I wished I could used a cityscape photo and write about it for class. It would have made my semester more fun haha :P
Scanned mixedmedia art: acrylic, watercolor, collage, pencil, graphite, textures, etc. From the Transcendent Worlds Series.
Exceptional detailed work, the drawing's dimensions being of more than 5,5 yards in height and 3,5 yands in width, by street artist Wild Drawing from Bali! I had to step on a car's roof to shoot it...
- Vous n'aimez pas mes photos!?!
Travail exceptionnel détaillé, les dimensions du dessin étant de plus de 5 metres en hauteur et de 3 metres de largeur, par l'artiste de rue Wild Drawing originaire du Bali! J'ai du monter sur le toit d'une voiture pour tirer l'image...
I finally did it! After a month of waiting, I finally got stickers for my custom wheatley! Surprisingly enough, they were given to me by the guy who made them himself. He sent me a full set of extras that were left over from his own custom portal project. You can find the sticker sheet here:
When printing them, I advise you do so on clear vinyl with a white flash. it might cost you a bit, but it's worth it. Oh, and cut some kind of line on the circular side dish. that will help a lot. As for building instructions, you can find them here:
Expect to see more Dimensions builds, as well as custom building from me soon (ESPECIALLY Lego Sonic stuffs). I've got BIG projects either finished, or in progress, so look forward to that.
Enjoy!
With the release of Lego Dimensions I picked up the Portal level pack for an upcoming build, I absolutely love the minifigure (Also happy with the Turret design which can be spotted in the back) and wanted to try something a bit different for my Flickr
I have been working on a build based off Portal 2 for the upcoming AMCE Convention which either close or after the convention I will put photos up here.
[Explore #109 on Sunday, July 28, 2013]
April 2014: Accepted in all 4 salons of Trierenberg Super Circuit 2014, Monochrome Print
Warsaw, Poland
Winter
Join me on my personal website Erik Witsoe or contact me at ewitsoe@gmail.com for cooperation. Thank you.
I also write on Medium and you can find me here: Erik Witsoe.
If you like my work, you can support me by giving me a like on my Facebook Erik Witsoe Photography and 500px and Twitter Instagram and also Google + Thank you for stopping by!
"La clé de la croissance est l'introduction des dimensions supérieures de conscience dans notre conscience."
Lao Tzu
"The key to growth is the introduction of higher dimensions of consciousness into our awareness."
Space, time and consciousness come together in this imaginative composite. The concentric colours inspired by the TV series ..."The Time Tunnel" those old enough would remember it well.
Porcelain bust - Qld art Gallery Australia
Wow.. I'm overwhelmed. Explorer #2 on October 7th 2008
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This is the first cut of a sequence of still images that were cut together to give a faux 3D look.
It's not exactly a singular strobist photo. It's many.. (most of them were shot with small flashes [nikon sb-800]).
I'm going to update this one as the cut progresses (titles, fine tuning, etc.)
If you look through my photostream, I'm sure you'll spot a couple shots that look similar to the ones used in this animation.
Permission was granted for the music.
by: Jaimie Cullum
title: These Are The Days
Incredible album! Check it out on iTunes!
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Update for those wondering how I went about creating this.
First of all the initial inspiration shot was taken.. just like any other photo on flickr. Completely traditionally. Then, the question was asked... How can this be converted into an animation? For a shot to work with this type of treatment it needs at least three elements that can give the shot a sense of "depth". A foreground element, a background element, and the central focus. The more elements that you have distributed along your z-space.. the better the illusion can be.
So, I shoot all of the different elements for each animation separately. For example, in the shot which featured 3 girls jumping off of the dock I had all three girls jump separately in order to avoid them overlapping each other and to maximize the resolution of each element. 3 girls jumping? 3 separate photos. For this particular example, I also took a shot of the background all by itself.
Then, all elements are brought into photoshop and isolated (using masks). This can be pretty time consuming.
Finally, all of these elements are brought into After Effects and distributed in 3d space on the Z axis. Animate the position of the virtual camera to taste, play around with the virtual camera's depth of field... and voila.
And.. the beauty of it all is that your camera most likely takes better-than-HDTV-resolution images. So, as long as you don't shrink them before bringing them into your compositing application.. you end up with HD video!
I hope that helps :)
Exhibition: BrickUniverse Gallery Piece
Parts: 9,200+ (~550 unique)
Scale: 1:650
Dimensions: 22in x 21in (54cm x 53cm)
Design Time: 60+ hours in 8 days
Build Time: 30+ hours in 4 days
PC: Brianda Mireles
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On the shores of the Mediterranean, where the Corniche of Alexandria meets the spur of the Eastern Harbour, sits a collection of modern buildings which hearken back to the city’s storied and scholarly past. At once intimate in accessibility and vast in scale, the Bibliotheca Alexandrina complex includes much more than its erudite title would suggest, as it is comprised of four museums, digital archives, a planetarium, a conference center, and – of course – a library (to name just a few of its many features). Built as a modern reimagining of the Great Library of Alexandria of antiquity, the stated mission of Bibliotheca Alexandrina is to be “A center of excellence in the production and dissemination of knowledge and to be a place of dialogue, understanding and learning between cultures and peoples.”
This commemoration of Alexandria’s status as one of the foremost centers of learning for millennia is also reflected in the design of the library itself. A nearly 525 ft (160 m) diameter disc rises from a brilliantly tiled mosaic pool (a callback to the city’s antiquity), and gently rises skyward to a height of 105 ft (32 m). Evoking both the rising sun on the Mediterranean and the library’s forward-looking mission, the disc is encased in grey Aswan granite carved with characters from 120 human scripts.
Just as the circular geometry of the Bibliotheca Alexandrina embodies a connection to the unending passage of time, so too was my own inspiration for this piece a circular loop. Having been trained as an architect, there were a veritable multitude of precedent studies I carried out during my academic career. Bibliotheca Alexandrina was, in fact, my primary source of inspiration for a semester-long project designing an archive. Since that 2014 studio, under the careful instruction of Professor Jennifer Park, I had always wanted to design and build my own piece at my signature 1:650 scale. Despite the use of numerous new-for-2021 LEGO parts, it was, instead, my recently kindled interest in classical antiquity, combined with a profound respect for works designed to preserve this knowledge for future generations, which ultimately drew me to finally see this piece through to completion. Despite the many centuries which have come and gone since the shelves of the ancient Library of Alexandria were consumed in the flames of conquest, the sun has always risen over the Mediterranean; an endless cycle which we can only hope to apply as infinitely toward our own inspiration and progress. This, after seven years of considering its purpose, is what the Bibliotheca Alexandrina represents to me and is what I hope to pass along to others in this and all my work.
The interior of Hallgrímskirkja.
Hallgrímskirkja is a Lutheran (Church of Iceland) parish church in Reykjavík, Iceland. At 73 metres (244 ft), it's the largest church in Iceland and the sixth tallest architectural structure in Iceland after Longwave radio mast Hellissandur, the radio masts of the US Navy at Grindavík, Eiðar longwave transmitter and Smáratorg tower. The church is named after the Icelandic poet and clergyman Hallgrímur Pétursson (1614 to 1674), author of the Passion Hymns.