View allAll Photos Tagged structure
Gigaom Structure Data event at Pier 60, Chelsea Piers in New York, NY on Wednesday March 19, 2014. (© Photo by Jakub Mosur).
This structure was above and to the left of the mill. Possibly related to the ore tram that ended around there. At the mill, ore was dumped in the top and underwent different treatments on each level, coming out in the form of ingots.
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I modified my crappy old nokia camera-phone with a small fisheye lens because the plastic lens cover broke. The lens was salvaged from an LED torch. It was just an experiment, since the phone took shitty photos anyway.
Wow, was I suprised!
It won't focus on anything further than 10cm from the lens, however the depth of field effect is wicked. If I had another camera, I'd take a photo of the phone. Anyway, I spent a day capturing the tiny parts of my neighbourhood.
Enter microville.
Update: phone died.
Gigaom Structure Connect conference at Mission Bay Conference Center in San Francisco, CA on Tuesday & Wednesday October 21-22, 2014.
HomePlace Structures
Winter is coming to Lancaster, PA. The beauty of our fair county is enhanced by the traditional Amish among whom we live and work. HomePlace Structures is delighted to offer many fine products crafted by these excellent artisans from the Amish community. www.homeplacestructures.com
structure, 2013
multimedia
3 x 3 x 258 inches
Courtesy of the artist.
Bill Smith: Beyond the Humanities
March 7–September 15, 2013
Photos by Michael DeFilippo
This is not an HDR photo. I used the brush tool in lightroom to brighten up the wood of the pavillion. The sky and the rest of the picture are displayed as exposed.
different types of crack, depending on type of material, thicknes and other influences
Still don't know what is the "script" behind.
Boat ride around Tam Coc, which they call the Halong Bay inland because the structures look the same. Long boat ride in the sun was very hot. It was good to see the countryside/rice paddies but the constant selling of goods while in the boat is annoying
Gigaom Structure Connect conference at Mission Bay Conference Center in San Francisco, CA on Tuesday & Wednesday October 21-22, 2014.
Another homework in 'analytical art work'. My structure-tool was a
steel wool. Based on that, I had to shoot 2 pictures of each: detail, unusual perspective and documenting.
This image focuses of the structure of an ecosystem’s attributes and accents on the plant species present of absent and their abundance in a “place”. Here, we see a clear change in succession, and vertical plant growth (both living and dead). To be chronological, the description of this image will start from the foreground and then move to the background. First, we see restoration being in process in the foreground. One of very few groups of people have gone against the social standards of “gift giving” (Jordan 2006), and have taken the time to clear space in a location overly invasive with non-native species. They have cleared the Himalayan blackberry bushes that were suffocation the habitat, and have started a new successional pattern in the foreground. Here, we see species, relatively abundant, that are sun tolerant and grow well in an open space. As they will continue to grow, they will set succession in motion, and as you can see further in the background, there is evidence of succession (sun tolerant going into shade tolerant plants). As we move further away from the foreground, we see evidence to both living and dead vertical structures. We see the decomposition of dead organic material in the mulch and underneath the plant floor and the lower plants. Then we see an abundant amount of shade tolerant floor plants and lower plants growing vigorously underneath the shrub level and the understory. Last but not least, we also see evidence of both coniferous and deciduous species of plants the further up the canopy level stretches. This is a great example if vertical arrangement of vegetation in an ecosystem.