View allAll Photos Tagged Module
Overhead Strobe w/diffuser
The photos in this set are part of a series of lighting experiments I did in the studio. I worked with a great model and learned more about the gear. I wanted to see how the light looked on her body. I found significant differences with subtle changes to the lighting technique. I didn't plan on publishing the photos but thought they came out great. Plus Dina is a very expressive model.
Kitchen Module
Version 5
Week 10 - 10 May, 2012
Finding that we were unable to fit the 4th version of the shower into the bus, despite its 5-module width, the height now posed a problem to its fixture once inside the bus.
The solution provided by Richard was to assemble the shower as two separate components, which both could be brought in as an individual module, and then bolted together inside the bus.
Based on thermal dot line printing technology,the CM1 is user-friendly,highly reliable to fit in the minimum space.
The purpose of the module was to apply sharpening to an image. This image was first sized to be output as an A4 print so it gave the opportunity to apply sharpening to an image with a relatively high resolution of close to 300 pixels per inch. Since this was for print it had slightly more sharpening applied than the one for screen.
Da Module Thingy - My handmade PC scratch build.
The link to the complete project log on the bit-tech.net Forums:
forums.bit-tech.net/index.php?threads/da-module-thingy.37...
At the request of some fellow OMRC members, I decded to make the module the "standard" size. I decided to keep a small portion of the extra part of the module to prevent people from trying to squeeze between the module and a pole that is fairly close to the module.
Next weekend I plan on making angled pieces to make everything "flow" a little bit better. The piece of track that goes no where right now will either connect into my new siding, or just end there. It really depends on if the guy who is working on that club owned module decides to work with me or not.
Strip Light: 90 degrees from camera
The photos in this set are part of a series of lighting experiments I did in the studio. I worked with a great model and learned more about the gear. I wanted to see how the light looked on her body. I found significant differences with subtle changes to the lighting technique. I didn't plan on publishing the photos but thought they came out great. Plus Dina is a very expressive model.