View allAll Photos Tagged Frame
Winter (2012-13) - www.goingslowly.com
---
Featured in the following journals:
March, 2013 in Photos (March 31st, 2013)
Timber Framing at Going Slowly HQ (April 2nd, 2013)
Timber Framing Course: Norwegian Grindbygg "Trestle Frame" (April 3rd, 2013)
Playing around with more concept based photos. Took this photo through the car window which created a nice frame of blackness against the bright center. cool thing i noticed was that there was actually light reflecting off the lens which is the blue spot to the top right and if you look closely you can see the shape of the building in front.
Video presentation of assembly of the frame of a rapidly erected structure at the booth of Mukhin Boris Grigorievich
Pretty clear night sky here at our country house in the south of Sweden.
Merry Christmas!
Sony A7R w Canon 16-35/2.8 @f2.8 25s ISO 1600 16mm
FICHA TÉCNICA
Título: Preto e Branco
Anunciante: Unilever
Produto: SKIP
Agência: BorghiErh/Lowe
Redação: Pedro Corbett
Direção de arte: Piu Afonseca
Direção de criação: José Henrique Borghi, Erh Ray e Fernando Nobre
Atendimento: Robert Filshill e Marcelo Sarti
Planejamento: Gabriela Soares e Thaís Frazão
RTVC: Márcia Coelho
Produtora do filme: Dínamo Filmes
Direção do filme: Ricardo Carelli
Produtora de som: SaxSoFunny
Maestro: Cesar Brandão
Finalização: Dínamo Digital
Aprovação/cliente: Ricardo Sapiro
Between Lynchford and Queenstown, on the West Coast Wilderness Railway.
Canon EOS 33 camera, Tamron 24-70 f/2.8 VC lens, Rollei Digibase CR200 colour slide film.
26% Howard DGA-6 (Mr. Mulligan)
Built by Mark Lanterman
Wendel Hostetler Plans
Wingspan - 99"
Weight - 26 lbs. (projected)
Powered by: DLE 55cc gas engine
Spektrum radio system
Zealandia wildlife sanctuary, Karori, Wellington.
Canon Rebel 2000 camera, EF28-105/f3.5-4.5 lens, Kodak Gold 200 colour negative film.
birthday gift last year, got inspired by seeing fabric frames at Anthropologie and decided that I could make some for gifts, but then I had to create a collage in photoshop to go in the frame. I never take the easy way out.
Sofi and Miles cram themselves into the too large metal figures at 798 Art District that everyone gets their photo taken in.
For the subject being framing, I chose this photo out of many I took for this assignment. Where this image takes place is at my future Aunt's wedding. She managed to get some lovely decorations at the wedding and I ended up capturing a couple of some photos for this assignment. I believe this photo shows a great use of Framing by the use of the drapes and the fire place. The drapes would probably be the main object that would give this photo the aspect of framing. It draws the eye to a focal point to a little below the center of the photo, the set of candles. These candles are a representation that later on happens toward the climax of the ceremony. The mother of the bride and groom step up and light the two candles on the sides, and the children from the bride light the center candle. Thus creating unison of two families. In photoshop, I used color balance to give the image a more cool and calming feel to it. I focused more on the green and the blue. I also upped the saturation just a bump, and messed around with curves to give a better lighting to the photo. If I could change one thing about this photo it would be to find a way to get rid of the reflection of the "EXIT" sign in the mirror. I find that little piece a bit distracting.
and some alignment checks.
The people who use the head tube as their alignment datum usually express seat tube twist in terms of the two readings that they get by the method shown in the previous images; but it really would be better to express it as an angular deviation.
This rig assumes that the tube is straight. I was just messing around, but I really should have the inclinometer on a beam that spans two V blocks that are a specific distance apart on the seat tube.