View allAll Photos Tagged deconstruction
Design II group project. Assignment title "deconstruction". 3 chairs deconstructed and reconstructed to form this sculpture.
what can I get you?
just a coffee. I want to take a last look.
I don't blame you. it's on its way out. after all these years.
yeah. make it to go, would you? I think I need a smoke.
you got it.
progress.
that's what they say.
sucks.
I was idly taking pictures of buildings in my hood and decided to do some urban planning and put them together ;)
TECHNIQUES vs. QUESTIONS
NEW TARGETS OF OPPORTUNITY
FRUITFUL COEXISTENCE
---
Listening: Bronnt Industries Kapial - Turksib
snapshot taken on the deconstruction site of Palast Der Republik, Berlin. a very aesthetic site, even by now...
Another classic Iowa farmhouse that had seen better days. I was and am fascinated by such places, how square and true they remain long after any maintenance, how visible they are in a pasture with grazing cattle to keep the brush at bay, and how they seem to come apart so slowly board by board through the years. There is no shortage of abandoned homesteads where I'm from but they are much harder to contemplate. Without the working farms the houses are swallowed by trees and brush, decay encouraged by steady storms off Lake Superior, and roofs that loose the battle against the heavy snows of winter. I haven't gone back to my notes yet and a quick look over the aerials doesn't show any such place today (not surprisingly) but I think this may have been somewhere near Dudley, Iowa. April 11, 1998.
I've been experimenting with creating "glitch art" also called "data bending." By changing the text code for photos, one can achieve interesting effects.
This began as a very blurred photo of yellow flowers with blurred green foliage and some black shadows. The data bending changed the colors.
After putting glitches in the text code, I used Photoshop CC to clarify it somewhat and then added a painterly texture in Topaz. One of those processes intensified the small spots of royal blue.
_____
How to Create a Glitch in your image:
www.frontrowsociety.com/frs/how-to-easily-create-glitch-art/
I had to change the file to a tif file first. (It didn't work for me in jpg.) Also you absolutely need to save your file as a copy and give it a new title BEFORE you begin because this will destroy your original file.
Even though I have tons of memory, at first everything I tried took forever, even scrolling through the text file. (I discovered that if I wanted to print the text file it would be 2700+ pages long when the photo was 12 X 16 at 300ppi.) The process went very quickly after I changed the image to 9 X 12 at 200ppi and to tif BEFORE beginning the data bending.
We’re Here! -- fruit destruction
The theme today was chosen by ruthlesscrab. It's her birthday. HAPPY BIRTHDAY RUTH!
Don't know what these trapezoids are. There are two at each end of the span being removed. Maybe bases for a pair of cranes.
A few people asked about structure and support issues. What I'm attempting to illustrate in this photo is the stand under the ship, the connection point of the beam to the engine core, the beam itself, and the wedge parts that slot into those grooves on the beams.
The beam is built studs-sideways, uses technic, and uses layers of 4xN plates. A beam with plates oriented vertically like that is pretty strong and will not sag or droop very much. Layers of 6xN plates would be even better.
I hope this is useful information.
The camera had one task -- to record the demolition of a building. When the building was demolished, the camera dropped down from the tree and lay on the grass gazing at the sun.
Here is the first shot of an upcoming series of this building in destruction. Be ready for the following pictures!!
This is a blend of 8 RAW together (-4,-3,-2,-1,0,1,2,3) to get all the details of this complex scene with a lot of contrast and difference of luminosity.
Please leave me some feedback!! Thank you! :)