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These screengrabs are from an application developed for an installation we had running at the Barbarian holiday party on December 14th in Boston. The setup was simple enough.
1) Drunk people.
2) Remote controlled camera and flash umbrellas in a make-shift photobooth.
3) Powermate knob controlling a Mac Automator script which would tell the camera to snap a photo, save the photo to a mac mini, resize the photo and place a copy into a shared folder.
4) MacBook Pro connected to a projector.
5) Processing application which pulls in photos from the Mac Mini and presents them as animated kaleidoscopes which are projected onto the wall above the dance floor.
Crowd-Made Party Visuals!
And now a few words about the presentation. Every 12 seconds, a new photo is pulled from the Mini. I decide randomly if it should be a 6, 12, or 18 pronged kaleidoscope star. I render the kaleidoscoped image to the screen and slowly push it back along the z axis so that it moves away from the viewer. This movement allows me to layer kaleidoscopic slides. The image itself is added as a texture to a bunch of mirror imaged triangles but I rotate the texture at a random speed so sometimes you get a central star gap which allows you to see through to the previous image.
Raeapteek (Tallinn, Estonia) is the oldest pharmacy in Europe. It has been in constant use as a pharmacy since before 1415. At one stage it was run by 10 generations of the same family!
This image was toned in Lightroom and grunge was added in Photoshop, as was the ragged edge. For the pw_assignments group from www.photowalkthrough.com
Here's the presentation pdf for my process, creative brief, and final mock up.
So... apparently we didn't need to do this? Aaagh. All that time spent...
Anyway. Here it is.
Lubitel 2 TLR med-format camera, expired Fujichrome 64T tungsten film, overexposed one-stop, cross processed.
My Mother-in-Law's garden never looked the same after she passed away.
Particle system for Flash Developers. Source code will be online soon alongside other chapter code from Processing for Flash Developers.
From top to bottom:
Binary
Basic (inverted Chord Catalogue)
Chord Catalogue
Gray Coded Chord Catalogue
Gray Coded binary
Made in Processing. Thanks to Chris Riebschlager for his brilliant code:
blog.the816.com/post/40438345149/pixelplaid-heres-a-quick...
It all started when we were cleaning out the photo club's locker. We found an old, expired disposable camera inside and nobody knew where it came from. Instead of throwing it out, I took it home and shot the roll in one weekend, eventually cross-processing it in some leftover E6 chemicals I had from my slide film processing. Since this is C41 (Color Negative) film, processed in E6 (Color Slide) chemicals, I expected some wild colors and strange effects. The result is actually strangely accurate to real life...
Taking some pictures by the Morningstar Grist Mill.
Homage to a print that Jared Tarbell sent me a while ago. Thanks for the inspiration JT (though yours is much more elegant... nice trick with the black orb with multiple specular highlights... sublime!). Rendered out at 5000x5000. Check the fullsize to see the detail.
Doesn't look like a lot stacked up like that, but printing each layer took 2-3 hours...seemed like the damn things never ended! Never screenprinted 200 copies of anything before, esp. without the benefit of a drying rack.
I love this photo so much. It was taken with a 35mm, scanned, and edited. Please let me know which one you like better! :)
A few photos of select pages of my process book for my honours project.
The book serves as the 'glue' of my project, describing the processes I went through throughout the year, as well as illustrating them with photos
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Couldn't decide which version to upload so I uploaded both.
The most trying part about this shoot was the lights. The owner of the car and the house refused to let me have an electric connection required for my lights. (No battery packs owned sadly) I really wanted to shoot here so I had to make do with a SB-800 and reflector.
This photograph was a last minute decision. I was shooting an old house close by when I discovered this car. I know it's a Plymouth, I am still trying to figure out what model.
It has the front of 1957 Plymouth Fury but it's a 4 door and also resembles the '58 Savoy. The Savoy however has a twin headlamp assembly.
I did go back and convince the owner to let me plug in my lights and while the power company decided take a break right when the skies were perfect I still have some decent shots.
I'll upload them later if they don't seem too repetitive.
Picture of Assam from probably ten years ago or so when we lived in California, processed by my camera program.
Staying very still until we walk away. Then he'll go under the deck, very slowly. How opossums survive I'll never know.
Processed with Flare