View allAll Photos Tagged experiments
Experimentation..
Using the previous image as a base, I tried a couple of the Photoshop filters. Using the Glowing Edges filter gave me the basic image. Enhancing the colours and contrasts brought out unseen textures and flattened the image.
For those of you who have followed my photostream, this is quite a departure from my usual postings!.
I think I've got a good system, which is just to let things happen. I had a shoot that didn't happen yesterday, so I was about to take it easy at home. Jada had a shoot around the corner from my house, and gave me a call after to see if I was free. Of course I was.
We met up, dodged some rain, went shopping for something for her to wear, then just walked in the park as the sun set slowly behind us. I have the most relaxing shoots ever, where we just enjoy what's around us, and every now and then I remember I have cameras.
There was no plan, we just figured it out until we got to the part with the pictures, and then with Polaroids lying in the grass, we just watched the sun escape as we listened to some good music from our phones.
A lighting experiment to see how much light I could paint back onto an image. This photo was taken at 1:20 AM. I purposely turned off every light in my house to make sure this was only being lit from a AAA powered keychain Maglite (which incidentally I use to get the camera to auto-focus in low light conditions), plus, of course the iPod itself.
Some minor cloning to get rid of the faint song displayed on the pod. If you look at the properties you'll see I tried to make it as tough as possible on the camera sensor. ISO 100, 6 second exposure. No color correction. White-balanced for tungsten.
The light pattern was made by the maglite itself to be bottom left of the camera hitting the table at an angle. Unless you focus the beam, there's a good circular area that doesn't get much light.
Strobist: Does a maglite count as off camera flash?
Experimenting illumination on my small office.
You can comment what is the colour you like most.
Enjoy…
Connectivity and readymade.
Experimenting, manipulating and combining daily life objects in order to attempt, to force or to mystify a workable connection between them, at least to make it visible and/or possible. This exercise is to be considered as a warm-up, a first step towards a further installation or project.
Erg (École de Recherche Graphique), Brussels, Arts Numériques-Atelier (New media art), 2016-2017.
Professors : Marc Wathieu.
DIG100182
Troligen experiment med kolsyra. Möjligen på Tekniska högskolan.
Experiment with carbonic acid.
Photo: Okänd/ Unknown
I cut the frame out of a plastic box with a knife and stretched some regular screen printing mesh over it - fixed with double sided tape. I painted on a resist medium (made by Windsor & Newton, similar to white PVA glue / Copydex) then covered it with screen filler when dry. I washed off the resist areas then printed in the gocco machine. I cleaned the screen and when dry, painted on it some more with screen filler. Then I printed the 2nd layer. The prints ended up with a lot of ink on them and needed blotting, but the blotts were pretty!
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So experimenting with textures. Hmmm,.... hahaha. So far i do not like them one bit (: but i hope to get better at them! well the quality to this photo... sucks lol. But it was just for a fun photoshop adventure. .
The focus suckkksss, but it was cloudy and i was under a tree... i guess i should of changed my settings :/ but i was being lazy!
Dont be surprised if this one leaves the stream in the near future because most likely it will.
Hopefully i will get the one i actually like on sometime tonight when i finish it :)
Experimenting with light, texture, colour and mood. This started out with soft, light pink tones but burned more red-orange as I listened to the song below and my mood changed. Interesting how things like music and colour can directly influence mood.
I never say this but.. press L and view this larger.
before and after on facebook
___________
Today's 365 soundtrack
Artist: Ed Sheeran
Album: +
Song(s): " Kiss Me"
_________
tumblr | facebook | website | formspring | 500px
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Visitor Center in Greenbelt, Md., hosted this month's Sunday Experiment on Nov. 18 from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. EST. It was a free afternoon for elementary-aged school children and their families to look at how NASA explores space and studies Earth from space using satellites and other technology.
This month’s Sunday Experiment explored NASA’s Tracking and Data Relay Satellite project. The TDRS project at NASA Goddard is building three new Tracking and Data Relay Satellites: TDRS K, L and M. Nine TDRS spacecraft are currently in geosynchronous orbit. Together they form the space-based communication relay network known as the Space Network (SN).
The SN is made up of seven TDRS spacecraft that are responsible for relaying more than 40 different spacecrafts' data to the ground 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The TDRS constellation is responsible for gathering data from low-Earth orbiting spacecraft such as the Hubble Space Telescope, NASA's Earth-observing fleet of satellites and the International Space Station, and transmitting it to TDRS ground terminals. Once the data arrives at the ground terminals, it is sent out to the spacecraft’s data processing facilities across the country. The communication also works the opposite direction with controllers on the ground using the SN to send commands like “Hey, satellite, turn your camera on!” to spacecraft.
TDRS K is the first of the third generation of TDRS satellites and is scheduled for launch in January 2013. This generation of TDRS will ensure that NASA’s communication needs are met for many years to come.
In addition to celebrating all things science, technology, engineering and mathematics, the Sunday Experiment celebrates major science missions that are managed by NASA Goddard and set to launch in the near future. The Sunday Experiment is a place where children and adults alike can discover the excitement of Goddard through fun and engaging activities.
Sunday Experiment, held the third Sunday of each month, spotlights Goddard's world-renowned science and engineering research, and technological developments. Families leave inspired by the activities, wowed by the scientists and engineers, and excited about Goddard's revolutionary research and technology.
For more information on Sunday Experiment, visit Goddard's Visitor Center webpage:
visitorcenterevents.gsfc.nasa.gov/
For more information and directions to the NASA Goddard Visitor's Center, visit:
www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/visitor/home/index.html
www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/visitor/directions/index.html
Credit: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center/Debbie Mccallum
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.
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Experimenting with the new Nikon 105mm f1.4E at the Isle of Wight Steam railway summer fair.
© 2016 Nick Edwards, All Rights Reserved This image is not available for use on websites, blogs or other media without the explicit written permission of the photographer.
Experimenting with shisha stitch and bottle caps in preparation for a belt project.
Threw a few bullion knots in there too!
Roll 16, the final roll of Analogue April. In the Yashica FX-D w/ ML 50mm f2
One of the reasons of doing a film-only month was experimenting with weird and random films I've never used before, and for this lot I used Adox Color Implosion.
It seems to be a strange sort of part redscale, part slide film. Redscale in the sense that it's rated at iso100, but I think it's actually an iso400 film. Due to the face that even when rated at 400 (the shot taken under the canal bridge is a good example) it doesn't look underexposed. Yet rating it at 100 (most of the really bright daylight shots) doesn't seem to look overexposed at all.
Part slide due to the weird colour shifts and prominent grain similar to cross processed slide films. Also the negative strip itself is a strange colour, a sort of dull pale lilac/purple.
Anyway, the guy in the shop I purchased it from (the shop in The Photographer's Gallery, London) was very helpful and gave me these tips on using it:
Rate at ISO100 for vintage looking, subdued saturation and a 60's-ish colour palette.
Rate at ISO200 for 'burning reds' (as mentioned on the Adox website) Everything gets a sort of green/aqua colour cast apart from red hues which get boosted.
Rate as ISO400 for more prominent 'retro' colours and more saturation than ISO100
Used these tips for the whole roll. Anything in bright sunshine was 100, anything with red in it was 200, and the odd few are 400.
On another note, the film might be a bit of a pain to get scanned. The automatic scanner used by the lab I took it to and used by a majority of other high street labs had issues actually finding the images on the negative due to it's dark colour, and I had to get them re-scanned manually which took more time and money.
Talk about overkill. This was shot with a 300mm lens plus 1.4 tele plus 3 extension tubes.
Just wanted to see how it would work.
Experimenting with ideas from Light Science and Magic.
Strobist Info:
Black card with a hole cut under each tube. Lit with Alien Bee 800 from below. I think I use a white card to add a touch of light to the stalks.
Presqu'à tous les jours, je vérifie mon expériment et si il y a eu un visiteur ou non...
Almost every day, I check my experiment, and see who has been about...
From the midwinter journal. Spread measures 42x13 cm.
Blogged:
caatjesartsystuff.blogspot.com/2011/01/more-from-midwinte...
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Visitor Center in Greenbelt, Md., hosted this month's Sunday Experiment on Nov. 18 from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. EST. It was a free afternoon for elementary-aged school children and their families to look at how NASA explores space and studies Earth from space using satellites and other technology.
This month’s Sunday Experiment explored NASA’s Tracking and Data Relay Satellite project. The TDRS project at NASA Goddard is building three new Tracking and Data Relay Satellites: TDRS K, L and M. Nine TDRS spacecraft are currently in geosynchronous orbit. Together they form the space-based communication relay network known as the Space Network (SN).
The SN is made up of seven TDRS spacecraft that are responsible for relaying more than 40 different spacecrafts' data to the ground 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The TDRS constellation is responsible for gathering data from low-Earth orbiting spacecraft such as the Hubble Space Telescope, NASA's Earth-observing fleet of satellites and the International Space Station, and transmitting it to TDRS ground terminals. Once the data arrives at the ground terminals, it is sent out to the spacecraft’s data processing facilities across the country. The communication also works the opposite direction with controllers on the ground using the SN to send commands like “Hey, satellite, turn your camera on!” to spacecraft.
TDRS K is the first of the third generation of TDRS satellites and is scheduled for launch in January 2013. This generation of TDRS will ensure that NASA’s communication needs are met for many years to come.
In addition to celebrating all things science, technology, engineering and mathematics, the Sunday Experiment celebrates major science missions that are managed by NASA Goddard and set to launch in the near future. The Sunday Experiment is a place where children and adults alike can discover the excitement of Goddard through fun and engaging activities.
Sunday Experiment, held the third Sunday of each month, spotlights Goddard's world-renowned science and engineering research, and technological developments. Families leave inspired by the activities, wowed by the scientists and engineers, and excited about Goddard's revolutionary research and technology.
For more information on Sunday Experiment, visit Goddard's Visitor Center webpage:
visitorcenterevents.gsfc.nasa.gov/
For more information and directions to the NASA Goddard Visitor's Center, visit:
www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/visitor/home/index.html
www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/visitor/directions/index.html
Credit: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center/Debbie Mccallum
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing compelling scientific knowledge to advance the Agency’s mission.
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Find us on Instagram
I'm experimenting with images and arrangements for the 6th grade art project. The school has a yearly dinner and auction as a fundraiser.
This is a piece of mica with an image of a bird in the center and some leaf skeletons. The front has some wood veneer glued onto the mica
Connectivity and readymade.
Experimenting, manipulating and combining daily life objects in order to attempt, to force or to mystify a workable connection between them, at least to make it visible and/or possible. This exercise is to be considered as a warm-up, a first step towards a further installation or project.
Erg (École de Recherche Graphique), Brussels, Arts Numériques-Atelier (New media art), 2016-2017.
Professors : Marc Wathieu.