View allAll Photos Tagged rubikcube

Street art in Mexico.

Canon 300V || Fuji ProPlus || ISO 200

 

More film vibes here >

INSTAGRAM | FACEBOOK | TUMBLR | LOMO HOME

 

More zeros and ones here >

Instagram | Fb Page | Cargo

 

Commercial work

Lirica Visual || Behance

 

>>> Upload your film photos to my group! :)

© RajRem Photography, 2009. All rights reserved.

 

All of my photographs are Copyrighted and All Rights Reserved. They may not be used or reproduced publicly in any way without my permission.

 

View LARGE

 

Most Interesting Shots | View Recent

 

Far out man. Got carried to a plane of higher consciousness with this vividly expressive flashback. What a trip man. Make love not war. Peace.

 

Seriously though... this cube was made from scratch using the Gimp. I used PhotoMasterGreg's excellent tutorial

Rubik Cube Tutorial in Gimp.

The end result is a little tricky to get the hang of, and you could never speed cube with it, but it remains fun, and everyone to whom I showed it at work really loved it. Also, every single person gave it back to me with pieces oriented wrong. The labels will help with that. The cry came back from all that it needs LEDs, and that speaks of another idea I've got in the works. Hopefully much more on that project in the days to come, but that one is all kinds of way harder than this one was.

 

The final tally:

 

27 acrylic cubes from 3 sets of 10 from Tap Plastics

108 D32 magnets 1/ea sets of 100 and 25 from K&J Magnetics

Duco Cement from the hardware store

3 hours of drilling and gluing - an hour each over 3 days

with shipment times, about 2.5 weeks from conception to final model

 

Of course, two days before I finished, my friend found this. $5 from China, and you can have a perfect, machine-made version. My prototype here, with all the parts and shipping, probably ran about $80. Alas, it was just one of many cube ideas I've had lately, and I had fun designing and building it, so the project is a success in my view. I searched for magnetic rubik's cube and got nothing. He searched for magnetic rubix cube. If only I had misspelled it, too, I would have known it existed. Actually, magnetic rubik cube finds it, too, but that didn't occur to me as a search term. I'm glad I didn't find it, because it felt good to just make something again. I'm bringing it along to the Maker Faire next weekend.

 

I'm considering building one or two more (and picking up that Chinese version), but if I do, I'm going to use much bigger disc magnets for the 6 axle connections to the central cube. They're a little weak right now.

February Alphabet Fun Month - "R" 02/18/25

My 5 years old nephew's first rubik cube.

© RajRem Photography, 2009. All rights reserved.

 

All of my photographs are Copyrighted and All Rights Reserved. They may not be used or reproduced publicly in any way without my permission.

 

View LARGE

 

Most Interesting Shots | View Recent

 

Yesterday after my sister’s family left I went to my room and I saw this beautiful colourful scene after my nephew left the Rubik’s cube on the Toronto Yellow Pages. The colours of the cube seem to complement the Yellow Pages’ colours so well, don’t you think?

 

So today I photographed it after readjusting the position of the cube and its configuration a little bit. Then I used Gimp to edit the photograph by making the printed arrow on the Yellow Pages look as if it in front of the cube (see the note on the image): this makes the arrow look more real.

 

I like this image--I hope you like it too—and I think it fits my ‘Colourful’ set perfectly :)

 

(Toronto, ON; summer 2008.)

 

© RajRem Photography, 2008. All rights reserved.

 

My new collection of CUBES, my average times to solve cubes are:

3X3x3 under 2 minutes

4X4X4 under 8 minutes

5X5X5 under 10 minutes

 

© RajRem Photography, 2009. All rights reserved.

 

All of my photographs are Copyrighted and All Rights Reserved. They may not be used or reproduced publicly in any way without my permission.

 

View LARGE

 

Most Interesting Shots | View Recent

 

A tribute to Malik Yasin Series.

[ From the test roll of Nikon F5, the same camera model that NASA brought to Space. ]

 

© RajRem Photography, 2009. All rights reserved.

 

All of my photographs are Copyrighted and All Rights Reserved. They may not be used or reproduced publicly in any way without my permission.

 

View LARGE

 

Most Interesting Shots | View Recent

 

As my kids are both back at school now and I had a little time after my unplanned visit to my office before they needed collecting again, I thought I would have a go at taking refraction shots. I was quite pleased with the way most of them turned out, I did some with flowers and this one with a nearly completed Rubik's cube. I just need to try and find a clamp or some other item that I could hold the the foreground item with, as this was hand held, so not as clear as I would have liked.

  

Not your classic yearbook photo, but I went with my instinct ! ;)

We did'nt have these cheesy photos here in Canada.. (well not at my school anyway!)

This cheap rubik prop ended up in the trash can... ;)

 

L is for Lame ! (..LOL.. )

 

btw... View On Black .. or else.. I won't like you anymore !!! :P

 

---

66x66 Roma 2007

 

rubikcubism mosaic

Photo © Tristan Savatier - All Rights Reserved - License this photo on www.loupiote.com/3914347707

Share this photo on: facebooktwittermore...

 

Groovik's Cube - Giant Rubik's Cube and and Hippocampus aka Seahorse art car

 

Photo taken at the Burning Man 2009 festival (Black Rock Desert, Nevada).

 

If you like this photo, follow me on instagram (tristan_sf) and don't hesitate to leave a comment or email me.

© RajRem Photography, 2009. All rights reserved.

 

All of my photographs are Copyrighted and All Rights Reserved. They may not be used or reproduced publicly in any way without my permission.

 

View LARGE

 

Most Interesting Shots | View Recent

 

Simply magic, Andi Gladwin cool magician.

 

Strobist info:

Westcott 28" softbox above and 580Ex speed light behind both triggered with PW's. PP'd lightroom.

5/20 for my photo-a-day in November challenge

 

Rubik cubes never quite went away and we've just bought a new one because my husband wanted to learn how to solve one in order to write a computer program that will guide you through the process.

stromness shopping week

My contribution to the Game & Watch exhibition at the Vantard Street Art Gallery in Switzerland (29/4-24/5)

Yes, it is all done with Rubik Cubes

 

Ping Pong 10 ans

Galerie Artcour

54 rue du faubourg saint Honoré 75008 Paris

Paris, April 10, 2008

 

www.pingpong.fr/

www.lebolabo.fr/expositions/ping-pong-art-50.html

Foto: JuliánDBernal ©

Todos los derechos reservados.

2010.

 

The red side on a Rubik's Revolution Electronic Cube

 

52 in 2024 #30. Cube

www.flickr.com/groups/14851624@N20/discuss/72157721919964...

È un mobile che si ispira al Cubo di Rubik, il rompicapo che negli anni '80, è un oggetto d'arredamento e di design.

Foto: JuliánDBernal ©

Todos los derechos reservados.

2010.

 

Week // Semaine 27/2019

 

Beaumont (74)

romephotoblog.blogspot.com/2009/09/hope-and-resurrection-...

 

Hope and Resurrection: A Street Art Reportage

Hobo Art Club

via Ascoli Piceno 3 (PIGNETO, Roma)

Vernissage 11 settembre alle 20

 

What is the power of an image? How does it effect/move/transform a place or a person? And what happens when people of different backgrounds come together to push an image out into the world?

 

The photography project Hope and Resurrection was brought about through the collaboration of American photographer and art historian Jessica Stewart and Roman street artists Mr. Klevra and Omino71. A singular image of the Madonna and Child, something so icon yet often overlooked in our modern times carries forward the sentence “Only After Disaster Can We Resurrect.” Plastered across Rome as stickers and posters, whether placed on electrical boxes and decaying walls or hung from clotheslines, this undeniable image was diffused through the city. How would people react? Would they break from their daily urban routine to stop, slow down, and observe the power of this image? Would people be able to recognize the artistry of the pieces instead of dismissing them as vandalism? How would each artist bring their style to this collaborative effort? By juxtaposing their collaborative pieces with their own individual works, Omino71 and Mr. Klevra allow the pubic to judge this for themselves.

 

The images exhibited have developed over the span over several months. First capturing the small-scale stickers that dotted Rome, with the iconic image of a child reaching out to touch the artwork as a focal point, and then moving toward an installation of posters on the public clotheslines of the Roman neighborhood Garbatella. Jessica shot the majority of the photography in a one-day whirlwind of activity across the city the evening after a pasting session by Mr. Klevra and Omino71. She set out to tell the story not only of each individual location, with its specific characteristics and contexts, but to also capture details which force the viewer to “observe” the pieces in a specific way, thus recalling the details one finds in art historical texts. The idea being to take the imagery put into the world by these artists and not simply report it, but also transform it into a powerful message of hope as seen through the eyes of the photographer.

 

Jessica Stewart is a Rome-based photographer and art historian. She relocated to Italy in 2005 to be surrounded by the Renaissance and Baroque art for which she is passionate. Her love of photography was developed during coursework at Boston University and honed through her blog—RomePhotoBlog, where she regularly posts images exploring contemporary living in Rome.

 

Her keen sense of observation, honed through years of studying the compositions of the Old Masters, is also informed by her time living as a foreigner in Italy. Through lighting and angles she seeks to find the beauty in everyday urban life and to breath new life into already iconic spaces. www.jessicastewartphotography.com

 

Omino71 is an anonymous Italian artist… or maybe he’s just a poscapen fan.

He works with poscapens, mosaics, acrylic paintings, photography, spraycans, posters, stickers, stencils, and flyers.

He plays with rubikcubes, postpunk, arcade games, scooters, skateboards, comics, sneakers, b-movies, popart. www.flickr.com/people/omino71

 

The pseudonym Mr.Klevra is derived from the Hebrew translation for rabid dog, is fitting considering that a bull terrier, with its oblong shaped head, is one ofthe recurring figures in his detailed artistic repertoire, which takes inspiration from both fantasy and street art. From the time he first remembers drawing, all self-taught, his style has ranged from futuristic illustrations to strict Byzantine iconography. Any surface will become a canvas in his hands, populated with strange figures, full of grace and yet with meticulous detail. www.klevra.com

more info: twitter.com/w3bdesign ; d4u.hu

While playing with the Rubik's cube, my wife, Mrs. R. Nirmala, had come up with the weird combination on one side, which she claims to represent the Indian Tricolor! With all colors in right place, all I could say was "Jai Hind!"

Mixed Media design, Photoshop & Illustration.

2nd Slide for Byte-Code.

for the basic photo I used:

 

http://www.flickr.com/photos/zanastardust/2149541542/sizes/l/

 

Thanks to the author.

 

Source: wallboat.com/rubiks-cube/

This is a free image you can use it.More free Images @ wallboat.com All images are Public Domain/Free and you can use any where for any purpose without any permission.Even you can use for commercial purpose.

 

#animal #wallpaper #freephotos #freeimages #business #education #beauty #fashion #architecture #cars #food #drink #landscapes #nature #people #religion #travel #vacation #science #technology #communication #love #relation #beach

I was commissioned by my company's Creative Design team to make pictures of Rubik cubes to illustrate one of the publications they are currently working on.

 

I went to the dollar store and purchase two cheap Rubik cubes and set-out to find out how many different images I could do of these cubes. I ended up with 56 images and decided to pick 12 of them to create this montage.

 

It was a fun exercise and 3 of them were picked to illustrate the publication...

2 4 5 6 7 ••• 29 30