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All photos © 2015-2020 by Yarin Asanth. Please note the copyright. The photos are the property of the photographer Gerd Michael Kozik! No further use of my photos in any form like websides, printing, commercial or private use. Do not use my photos without my expressed written permission !
An old barn near Chili, Illinois that had seen better years. It was dilapidated to the point that a farmer passing by warned me not to get too close or go inside of it
IMG_9833
© Stephen L. Frazier - All Rights Reserved. Duplication, printing, publication, or other use of these images without written permission is prohibited.
on a leaf of a Canna.
©This photo is the property of Helga Bruchmann. Please do not use my photos for sharing, printing or for any other purpose without my written permission. Thank you!
When printing was as much an art form as a technology.
Or, the day the people at the Print Shop at History San José set me and my camera loose in their type storage cabinets.
Having had some experience with off-set printing in the past, it was interesting to see how they used to do it.
- a part of the „Gardens of the World“ in Berlin - Marzahn.
The Chinese Garden was opened in 2003 and it’s size is 27.000 square meters.
Unfortunately I couldn’t find a good translation of this German Information:
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gärten_der_Welt
© This photo is the property of Helga Bruchmann. Please do not use my photos for sharing, printing or for any other purpose without my written permission. Thank you!
CN L537 comes to a stop at the end of double-track territory at Kelley behind a pair of IC SD70s. The train has just emerged from underneath McCormick Place which is located next to the historic R.R. Donnelley printing plant on the right, built in segments between 1912 and 1929.
pencil and acrylic with a little collage. the collage greens are a little brighter than this pic shows.
Two images uploaded today. Same negative, same printing session using Moersch Easy Lith 25+25+950. The only difference is the paper used. Here I used Agfa Brovira grade 4
Do you think Kodak was an influence?
Do you think the name on the paint was Kodak Yellow?
I loved Kodak film and I love that this photographic studio is painted yellow.
Kodak are an interesting company so powerful for so long with their excellent film and printing paper. The wonder slide film for so many year so dominant. The company in my youth was like Apple 🍏 today so all I can say is watch out Apple you are only dominant for now. I would like to say I’m using an iPad to post this!!!!
Ancoats, Manchester
A first proper outing with me ol’ mucker – Eddie ‘Rainman’ Coulson of 2021 and the chance to post something not from the last decade. We’ve both been dabbling in Etsy in recent months and decided to go and shoot some of Manchester’s historic landmarks with the view to printing some of them. I must confess I’ve never been to this part of town and initially made straight for Anita Street, which has an interesting history going back to the Industrial Revolution, but I’ll write about that in another posting. Sankey’s is further afield and quite a well-known landmark, but if you didn’t know where it was you could spend hours walking around this part of town and never spot it.
Luckily, Eddie knows the area well and pointed me in the right direction. The weather on Friday was glorious and sunny, but not a cloud in sight, so you’ll have to forgive me with this subtle replacement sky. So good to be out and about again and shooting some new material.
It has quite an history as a nightclub… here’s a condensed summary
Sankeys first opened in Manchester as "Sankeys Soap" in June 1994. It was so called due to its residence inside Beehive Mill, Ancoats, which once was used to manufacture soap. The basement of the mill was transformed into a club and live music venue by Andy Spiro and Rupert Campell. After nearly going bankrupt only six months after opening, the venue managed to keep thriving. However, in 1998, due to financial problems, Sankeys Soap closed its doors to the public.
In 2000, the club was revived by business partners David Vincent and Sacha Lord-Marchionne. This time the club was more successful than before, tackling the problems that had crippled its previous owners. In 2006, the club was forced to close once more, much to the dismay of clubbers. David Vincent announced that this time Sankeys Soap would be closed for good.
Later that summer, it was announced that the club was to re-open under the shorter name Sankeys. It would be under the direction of David Vincent who invited Andy Spiro to get involved once again. During its closure the club underwent a major refit involving a brand new LED lighting system and featured the "hatongue" who took over from the legendary "Mad Graham" after the PAR cans were removed. The main DJ booth was also replaced by a new circular box.
In 2009, owing to the success of the new club, 15 further changes were made to celebrate 15 years of the Sankeys dynasty. These included dynamic ceiling lighting in the Spektrum (the upstairs part of the club) as well as a beach constructed with 50 tonnes of Bahamas Sand and the introduction of a state-of-the-art barcoded entry system. In 2010, Sankeys was voted the number one club in the world in a DJ Mag reader poll.
Following the success of 2010, David Vincent announced plans to create "Seven Sankeys" of the World in the seven cities that inspired the original Sankeys.
The music policy at Sankeys was varied but focused on underground electronic music, mainly House & Techno. The club also hosted one-off nights from outside promoters.
Resident DJs over the years included Greg Vickers, Bushwacka!, Jozef K, Darius Syrossian, Ellesse, Ryan Croft, Adam Chappell, OD Muzique, Pete Zorba, and Luke Welsh.
On 11 April 2013, Sankeys announced they would be closing the doors again on 6 May 2013.
On 12 November 2013, Sankeys announced on their Ibiza Twitter feed that they would be re-opening Manchester in January 2014.
On 12 January 2017, Sankeys announced that they were permanently closing with immediate effect, after the building they occupied had been sold to be turned into apartments.
january 26, 2010
view large to see details. or go HERE to see bigger/more photos.
you know how every teenage girl/artist poss stuff on their wall? yeah everyone except me.
so i decided to print out a few of my fav photos in november. and have not gone around to printing them out (school printer baha) until now :D
i looove it and it's definitely going to expand.
and because i'm a nub i put the url credit to all the photos that didn't belong to me behind it :D
Location : Tanah Lot, Bali, Indonesia
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Julie and I helped my friend Karl print lino cuts from his Guadalajaran collaborators. They are at 3gatospress.art, if you want to see more. We had a blast showing their art and printing samples with their tortilla press for visitors to the opening of the Hecho Gallery in Santa Fe, New Mexico!
Hackney Road
Lens EXIF data not recorded correctly. The lens was a 7Artisans 35mm f/0.95. Aperture used unknown.
The five remarkably small and details prints were meant as models to decorate objects such as clocks, locks, boxes, vessels, cabinets and swords. One of De Bry’s two circular designs represents a duke as Commander of Folly encircled by hybrid creatures in ungainly poses. Similarly, the strange beings surrounding Charles V’s profile seem to underscore his enlarged lower jaw, a deformity the worsened in later Habsburg generations.