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A modern factory building in Japan.
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Aircraft factory, Chullora
Dated: c. 1945
Digital ID: 17420_a014_a014001272
Rights: No known copyright restrictions www.records.nsw.gov.au/about-us/rights-and-permissions
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Just another day at the Factory 🏭
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Still from Modern Times a brickfilm inspired on the factory scenes of Charlie Chaplin's 'Modern Times': youtu.be/8LBRosRvum8
798 Art Zone or Dashanzi Art District, is a 50-year old decommissioned military factory buildings with unique architectural style. Located in Dashanzi, Chaoyang District of Beijing, that houses a thriving artistic community. The area is often called the 798 Art District or Factory 798.
The East Germans helped China build up these factories in the early fifties. The plans called for large indoor spaces designed to let the maximum amount of natural light into the workplace. Arch-supported sections of the ceiling would curve upwards then fall diagonally along the high slanted banks or windows; this pattern would be repeated several times in the larger rooms, giving the roof its characteristic sawtooth-like appearance. Despite Beijing's northern location, the windows were all to face north because the light from that direction would cast fewer shadows. The East Germans did a great job and the project turned out to be a very successful military electronic supplier.
the corporation moved out of the Dashanzi District and leased those plants (798 factory being one of them). The architectural style, featuring simple design and varied composition, follows the Bauhaus way. Attracted by ordered design, convenient traffic, unique style of Bauhaus architecture, many art organizations and artists came to rent the vacant plants and transformed them. Gradually there formed a district gathering galleries, art studios, cultural companies, fashion shops, restaurants, etc. As the area where the early art organizations and artists moved in was located in the original area of the 798 plant, this place was named 798 Art Zone Today
My Photoshop actions and Lightroom presets on Creative Market
Factory Girl series
model: Ksu Govorukhina
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"Museum of Factory" Manufaktura, Łódź, Poland..
Kuala Sepetang Charcoal Factory which has been operating since the 1930s . Charcoal is generally made through the process of pyrolysis, which is heating a substance in the absence of oxygen. In this instance, the raw material used is the wood harvested from the nearby mangrove forest, while the heat comes from large, conical brick structures known as kilns that are basically ovens. After stripping the trees of their bark and placing them inside the kiln, the process of transforming the wood into charcoal can take over a month to complete.
Bricks inside an old factory.
Expired Polaroid film.
Camera: Mamiya Universal.
Lens: Mamiya Sekor P 75mm f/5.6
Film: Polaroid Polacolor Studio 125i Silk Expired 03/2009
Scanner: Epson Perfection V700
Hoy os traigo una foto que hice el otro día así por casualidad en un almacén de la empresa de mi madre, la foto la hice con la idea de sacar escenarios para futuros montajes que tengo ganas de hacer. Espero que os guste!
Shot taken inside the factory for a special report you'll find here;
arthomobiles.fr/MMRM09/Pagani/pagani.htm
cheers
Nestled in a valley outside of Petaluma, California, stands the landmark where the well-loved cheese Rouge et Noir is made. Known locally as The Cheese Factory, its real name is the Marin French Cheese Company, and it has produced hand-crafted, soft-ripened cheeses in this same location since 1865, making it the oldest cheese manufacturer in the USA. I’ve passed it many times on the way to Point Reyes, always promising to stop next time. Last week I finally took the time to visit and I’m glad I did.
The moment I stepped into the cheese shop, I was invited to taste. I delighted in the various aromas, textures and flavors of brie, Camembert, and bleu cheeses, before taking a mini tour of the facility. Through a window I watched as workers poured warm milk into containers with added culture. From here, the natural process of converting milk to cheese only takes a few hours. Once the curds have thickened, the whey is allowed to drain away and the new cheese is formed into molds. Each cheese is aged for a specified period of time depending on its type, and then finally packaged for sale.
As lunch time approached, I headed back to the shop and picked out a Petite Creme Rouge et Noir, a packet of crackers, and a drink. Resting outside by the duck pond, I savored my snack, along with a view that encouraged me to pull out my watercolor paints. This area of northern California, known for its artisan cheeses, is especially beautiful in late autumn, after seasonal rains have begun to fall. Rolling grass-covered hills that were sere and golden just last month are now a brilliant emerald green. The cows that dot these hillsides are no doubt happier of late, eating newly sprouted grasses.
Another experimental image taken with the ChronoLux F/57 pinhole camera that I built.
40 second exposure at -6°C...
a massive wall of colored window panes, blue and green, broken and untouched line the side of this abandoned steel factory.
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This former shoe factory in Northampton dates from the 1870s. It finally closed its doors after 120 years of trading in 1995 and has been empty ever since.
Permission was obtained to photograph this building.
Sounds : Please Right Click and select "Open link in new tab"
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jc7wh5ovdK4
Ritornell - The morning factory