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A view of the entrance to the Louvre via the Louvre Pyramid designed by the Chinese-American architect I. M. Pei. Where I was standing to take the photo was as near as possible to get to the building. I liked the two black cubes either side of the photo but I can't remember what they were for? Bins perhaps? You can also see to the right the red metal things. They had what appeared to be powerful lights on the top. Again, not sure what that was all about, perhaps floodlighting? I appreciated the touch of red. :-)
..."so" könnte man den "Cube" zur Not als Meteorit wiederverwenden...
na, wenn das nicht mal "nachhaltig" ist :)
Looking at these empty boxes that would never be filled, I was reminded of that old sci-fi horror film, Cube. I'm pleased to say that Michael and I were able to get out alive.
I don't generally go for 'abstract' (by now you know I'm keen to just document the spaces I find myself in) but this one was pretty cool. Maybe these boxes continued forever...
Gaudí Cube, the immersive experience at Casa Batlló in Barcelona, Spain.
Casa Batlló, has incorporated digital art and projections into its visitor experience, blending modern technology with its historic architectural beauty. This specific room was part of the “10D Experience,” an audiovisual installation that enhances Gaudí’s vision with dynamic visuals, mirrors, vibrant colours and binaural sound. The first real 360º LED screen experience in the world.
♥ Thank you very much for your visits, faves, and kind comments ♥
For the Macro Monday theme "Reflection" (November 11th 2019)
I had fun with this challenge. I often use reflections - 6 of my last 7 MM entries have used reflections! So the challenge was to find something different, and also something a little bit tricky. So I dusted off (quite literally too!) my tiny Swarovski crystal cube beads. Each bead is only 8mm, which makes them really difficult to organise and stack. Once stacked I scarcely dared to breathe, and it takes a toothpick to arrange them ;o)
I used my closest macro lens, a 30mm Sony.
The beads (and others I tried) are set against the 3"x2" credit card (that I use as my size guide) in the first comment field.
HMM to everyone, and have a great week ;o)
My 2019 Macro Mondays set: Here
and previous years of the challenge:
My 2018 set: 2018 Macro Mondays
My 2017 set: 2017 Macro Mondays
My 2016 set: 2016 Macro Mondays
My 2015 set: 2015 Macro Mondays
My 2014 set: 2014 Macro Mondays
My 2013 set: 2013 Macro Mondays
So, you are sitting in a perfectly square room, with white walls, a white ceiling, and a reflective floor. The ceiling to floor height is such that when you look at the floor you appear to be floating in the middle of a cube.
People are lounging around on bean bags, fantasy images are being projected on the walls, and Pink Floyd music is playing loudly. Where are you? The Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco in the 1960s, or Bordeaux in 2023?
The correct answer is, of course, Bordeaux, 2023. The Cube is part of Les Bassins des Lumières in the WW II submarine base in Bordeaux (flic.kr/p/2piqLxZ).
This is a close-up photo of a melting ice cube on a plate, with light from an LED lantern refracting through it.
The Ka'ba-ye Zartosht or the Cube of Zoroaster, is a stone square stepped structure in the Naqsh-e Rustam compound beside Zangiabad village in Marvdasht county in Fars, Iran. The Naqsh-e Rustam compound also incorporates memorials of the Elamites, the Achaemenids and the Sasanians.
The Ka'ba-ye Zartosht is 46 metres (151 ft) from the mountain, situated exactly opposite Darius II's mausoleum. It is rectangular and has only one entrance door. The material of the structure is white limestone. It is about 12 metres (39 ft) high, or 14.12 metres (46.3 ft) if including the triple stairs, and each side of its base is about 7.30 metres (24.0 ft) long. Its entrance door leads to the chamber inside via a thirty-stair stone stairway. The stone pieces are rectangular and are simply placed on top of each other, without the use of mortar;
fascination with a new building, Berlin
www.ubm-development.com/magazin/en/smart-building-cube-be...
The White Cube in Bermondsey was a great find. I expected the art center to be white on the outside, but I had to go inside to see the why the name. The space is designed as a minimalist gallery - so minimalist in fact that there is very little artwork! This image shows just a sliver of what you might find in one of the galleries - a bright slice of orange inviting you in. Bermondsey itself was a bit of a surprise, an up-and-coming area that I need to explore more (and not just the Friday antique market!)
Taken with Cosina Hi-Lite DLR, Cosinon auto 50mm f1.8 and Ilford Delta 100. Developed in Fomadon R09 1:50.
Cube houses (Dutch: kubuswoningen) are a set of innovative houses built in Helmond and Rotterdam in the Netherlands, designed by architect Piet Blom and based on the concept of "living as an urban roof": high density housing with sufficient space on the ground level, since its main purpose is to optimise the space inside. Blom tilted the cube of a conventional house corner upwards, and rested it upon a hexagon-shaped pylon. His design represents a village within a city, where each house represents a tree, and all the houses together, a forest. The central idea of the cube houses around the world is mainly optimizing the space, as a house, to a better distribution of the rooms inside.
Cube houses are a set of innovative houses built in Rotterdam and Helmond in the Netherlands, designed by architect Piet Blom.
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This is a shot of the apple store in NYC. I was walking around when the sun was setting and I thought that I would take a shot of the building before it was lit up. It is very interesting with all of the lines running up the structure.
I anted to take a shot whilst it was lit up but i didnt have my tripod that evening and didnt make it back to get the shot. I shall put this on my list of things to shoot when I go back at some point in the future.
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The big cube is a table in our living room, I just love glass and light, the distortions, the glows.
The other two glass cubes, I use for many things, a vase ets....
Once I got going in the studio, there was no stopping me.
But what I tried to do was, each time, create a completely DIFFERENT image with the same subject.
Top view of a glass cube on a glass cube on a light cube, still with me, lol?
Different lights give different hues on film, this came out more yellow, but I didn’t feel like removing the colourcast, liked it as it was.
Hope you enjoy looking at them as much as I did making them.
Thank you, M, (*_*)
For more: www.indigo2photography.com
Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
cubes, lights, glass, colour, white, lighting, black-background, design, studio, table, square, NikonD200, "Magda indigo"
Just been away for a weeks holiday. First thing you do when you get home is turn the iMac on and start editing images. It's a sad life. Lol