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wrap the first layer of wool roving around the soap, this becomes part of the base felt

is that better, heather?

I shoot this at MOMA.

 

Nikon F3HP + Ektar 100. Post-processed to black and white.

Profitable Producers (http://profitableproducers.com) Product Creation Process involves 2 projects.

Model:

Laura Lee

 

Creative Director:

Christina Tang

 

Hair / Makeup Stylist:

Angela Sun

 

Lighting Director:

Scott Prince

 

Photographer:

Jeremy Lim

 

Post-Production:

Jeremy Lim

A DM based 23rd TASS OA-10A undergoing the preservation process at the AMARC arrivals area in July 1992.

 

The plastic spraylat coating has been applied to the canopy and the black undercoat can be seen covering the engine intakes.

 

23rd TASS OA-10As were used in the Forward Air Controller role and saw action in Operation Desert Storm. OA-10s are no different to 'standard' A-10s, the designation refers to the a/c's role rather than equipment fit.

Original image by Ian Allington - Furness Camera Club processing challenge

Built-Rite Firewood Processor

 

Zo'n lens als de Loawa Dreamer heb je niet gelijk onder de knie, dus heb ik hier een uitsnede gemaakt van wat wel gelukt is.

You can't master a lens like the Loawa Dreamer straight away, so I've made a crop here of what I did manage.

 

in camera...hard to resist

The scan of this print did not work as well as I wanted it to but this is one of my fav landscape pics, taken from the dirt road running behind the Langeberg Mountains, past Tradouw towards Heidelberg. The "sheep" on the hill are actually rocks; the colours are all distorted because of the cross processing.

 

~ Scan of print taken with an old Canon SLR (cross process film)

 

Some of my buddies heard I was processing film in my underwear and they requested a photo (of course). Since I'm more than a little bit of a smart-ass this is what they got. :p

Heavily processed image of Bonkers.

Processed with VSCO with preset

Early in the render process. Probably too much red. After a few hundred frames, I think the red is going to overwhelm. Whatev. I will let it ride.

 

Read about it here.

drawn and cut out -> installed

My logic can not describe this burning I have for her.

The photo shows the tools I used to hold a 2x4 against the ceiling of my garage. I was attaching 2x4s to the ceiling to make it easier to hang things and brace things (like free-standing shelves).

 

The picture was taken part-way through the process of pressing the board to the ceiling. I was acting alone. Based on something I saw in a magazine, and heavily influenced by my make-it-as-complicated-as-possible philosophy, the method I used was this:

 

1. Mark location on ceiling for the 2x4 ceiling board (hereafter referred to as "ceiling board").

 

2. Nail two small string cradles to the ceiling near the ends of the proposed position of the ceiling board. The ceiling board will hang temporarily in these cradles.

 

3. Insert one end of the ceiling board into one cradle, then the other end into the other cradle. Result: the ceiling board is hanging in the two cradles about two inches (5cm) below the ceiling.

 

4. Place two clamps within easy reach of each end of the ceiling board. They will be used later.

 

5. Grab two other boards: a pre-cut board that is almost as long as the floor-to-ceiling distance and a short board. These, clamped together, will act as temporary supports for the ceiling board. Stand on a stool under one end of the ceiling board, holding the two supports together vertically.

 

6. Keeping the supports pressed together, move the short board upward as far as possible, elevating the end of the ceiling board. Clamp the two supports together. RESULT: the very end of the ceiling board is pressed against the ceiling. The other end of the ceiling board is still lying in its cradle.

 

7. Repeat the raising process at the other end of the ceiling board. RESULT: this end of the ceiling board is now pressed against the ceiling, but the other end is still a bit loose.

 

8. Return to the first end of the ceiling board, loosen the clamps, repeat the raising process, and re-clamp the supports. RESULT: this end of the hanging board is tight enough against the ceiling to require no more raising.

 

9. Return (again) to the second end and repeat the raising process there. RESULT: the ceiling board is pressed tightly enough against the ceiling to allow drilling of pilot holes for the screws that will attach the ceiling board to the ceiling.

 

10. Drill holes, install screws, remove the hanging cradles and supports.

 

The process is tedious to say the least. But it worked: I attached four 2x4s to the ceiling in this manner. After this work was finished I realized I could have simplified this process by using my stepladders as bases for holding the 2x4s in place. One can buy devices called "third hands" (often used by carpenters and drywall installers) to hold things in place, but I am too cheap to shell out $50 for a tool that gets little use.

 

I am in a rare fit of industriousness in the garage. That's why I've been inactive on Flickr lately. The goal is to create a better working environment on my side of the garage and enough additional storage space that we can park my wife's Jeep in the garage again.

Processed with VSCOcam with c3 preset

Processing Bordeaux #01

17 Janvier 2012 à l'I.Boat

"Les dix ans de Processing"

 

Affiche réalisée en collaboration avec Mark Webster.

 

www.processingbordeaux.org

paint with photoshop7 through picture

Processed with VSCOcam with c3 preset

Cancer took me on a shitty detour as I got my bowel functioned sorted out.

What shall I color next?

Abstract generative art processing

picked a BBC photo of a lion which fitted inside the flaws

Processed with VSCO with a1 preset

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