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Model: Priscila Yokomizo

Make up: Yumi Nishitani Kitada

© 2013 Diego Cipriano

My studio with two new needlework pieces framed

Blogged here

You can't see it here, but we live on the ocean so there is a beautiful view from the windows and also sliding glass doors. Sometimes I don't get much done because I'm looking out the window!

Studio installation for Season 1 of My Kitchen Rules New Zealand.

GMA NETWORK CENTER ANNEX (known as GMA NETWORK STUDIOS)

 

GMA Network Studios is a building owned by GMA Network Inc. and it houses productions of the programs for the station. The structure was built on land measured 4,308-square meters. GMA Network Studios has two main stages: Studio 7, the largest studio room of the network (that can carry 1000 audiences) which houses All Out Sundays (and other shows like SOP, Party Pilipinas, Sunday All Stars, and All-Out Sundays), and German Moreno Studio (formerly named Studio 6) which houses Wowowin, Tiktoclock, and other GMA Variety Shows

 

Medium: Canon EOS 4000D

Date Taken: September 21, 2024

 

Copyright 2024. All Rights Reserved.

Tour de poitrine (81 / 86 / 91 / 97 / 102 / 107cm)

Rowan Baby Alpaca Dk :

Lincoln (209) : 18 / 18 / 19 / 20 / 21 / 23 pelotes

In February I've spent a weekend in Mosonmagyaróvár and Győr for a photoshoot with the awesome guys from the band Apnoe. They play a rather unique music by fusing rock'n'roll with hungarian folk music elements, in a spectacular manner. They call it folk-underground which suggests an interesting loveschild. These shots were made for their second, upcoming album. Thank you guys!

 

Check them out at: apnoeband.blogspot.hu/

on FB: www.facebook.com/apnoeband

 

© 2013 / Szabolcs Husz / Height of Field

Studio Đăng Khoa

 

Web: dangkhoastudio.com

Hotline: 090.6666.890

Email: studiodangkhoa@yahoo.com

252/2 Lê Văn Sỹ , phường 1, quận Tân Bình , TP.HCM

This is an artist's studio located in the building I sell my postcards in. I wish I was rich enough to rent one.......I may just dream my day away and never come back.

TreeHouse Studio

Oakhurst, City of Decatur

 

Nikon D2x

Nikkor 50mm f/1.4 AF

Alien Bee, MacDaddy OctaBox w/grid, right

Alien Bee w/20 deg grid, high and rear left

Large circular black reflector (to kill main reflections), left

Background is unlit white shower curtain

CyberSynch triggers

Went to the pavilion to the open day and used there studio to take these amazing images none have been edited and they are a mix of studio lighting for more contrast and shadow on the model and also tried some natural hots. these are my favorite of the day

 

studio lighting was done unde these settings

 

Iso 200

F.8

1/125

wb-Flash

  

Model: Hayley Lewis

(her page)

www.facebook.com/TrueModellingGlasgow

 

Big Thank you for letting me use the studio Barrie and Fiona

(studio page)

 

www.pavilionphotographicstudio.co.uk/

Top of paper cube in my studio.

Ardent Studios, Memphis, TN. The original Auditronics (Spectra Sonics) console from studio B, on display in the tracking room of studio B(formerly the control room of studio B) . This photo was taken at their 40th anniversary party, Nov 2006.

Never really expected to be a studio photographer. But, add it to the list of things I do photographically. This is Leanna White, and what a great job she did for me last Thursday night. Lovely young lady, who is a creative person herself. Check her out at:

 

www.leannawhite.com

 

Find me on Facebook:

 

www.facebook.com/jdfieldingphotographer

 

www.facebook.com/jnjphotographics

 

Twitter: @jdfieldingphoto

 

Hair by: Eileen Marion

Make-up by: Kelly Visconti

Sam Fox School, Undergraduate Art+Design Studios.

Photos by Joe Angeles/WUSTL Photos

Chụp ảnh áo dài tại Zeus Studio

Địa chỉ: Số 8 Nguyễn Biểu, Ba Đình, Hà Nội

Contact: 043.999.11.77

0945188666

0934486400

www.facebook.com/zeusstudio

Sign by Merzlak Signs in Jackson

Touring Baker County with the AmericArt2019 Film Crew

 

Touring Baker County with the AmericArt2019 film crew exploring arts and culture in small town America. Baker County was selected as one of 10 small towns across the USA to be included in this documentary about art and culture in small town America.

 

The Americart2019 film crew spent two days exploring Baker County's local art scene, filming at several locations including the Blue Mountain Fine Art Bronze Foundry, Muddy Creek Studio, the Orpheum Theatre restoration project and Churchill School arts incubator, and interviewed numerous local artists and arts enthusiasts on the importance of art and culture in rural America

 

one of the highlights of their tour was a stop at Muddy Creek Studio with acclaimed local Baker County artist Terri Axness.

 

Terri Axness is a Baker County native and Eastern Oregon provides the inspiration for her work. Best known for her landscapes, she also paints still life, portraits, and decoys works in a variety of mediums including pencil, oil, acrylic, watercolor, and clay. She is also well known for her ceramic pieces and sculpture which vary from humorous and whimsical to functional.

 

Much of her ceramics work is in the Raku style, which is a process in which work is removed from the kiln at bright red heat and subjected to post-firing reduction (or smoking) by being placed in containers of combustible materials, which blackens raw clay and causes crazing in the glaze surface.

 

For more information about Terri Axness and her work including upcoming classes and workshops visit the Muddy Creek Studio website at www.axnessart.com. For more information about other Baker County artists, classes and art events visit Baker County Tourism's website at www.travelbakercounty.com

 

For more information about the AmericArt2019 Documentary including production schedule and release dates visit their website at www.americart2019.com/.

 

For more information about Art in Baker County including galleries, tours, special events and local artists visit Baker County Tourism's website at www.travelbakercounty.com

  

Studio Portraits

Black and white version of the previous shot.

Photographer | Angello Cueva ©

Model | Chelsea Weiman

Fashion Stylist | Susana Mutti

Location | Studio Sinfin

 

www.facebook.com/angelo.cueva.5

 

www.behance.net/angelocueva

Foto: Gilson de Rezende

Figurino: Luciano Navarro

Produção de moda: Luciano Navarro

Make-up/hair: Maurício

 

Dear Greatmats,

Great experience! We love the floor in our home dance studio. Easy to install and great quality!

Rebecca,

Jacksonville, FL

www.greatmats.com/dance-flooring/rosco-adagio-cut.php

Here's the short version of an explanation: in an attempt to "give them what they want", thesis has transformed into an underground museum accessed by a giant sunken plaza (location on the mall still the same). The plaza will be low enough so as to act as a giant skyspace (the only place in washington dc where everyone can go and only see sky...to be removed from city buildings completely). The museum is dedicated to temporary installation art, a series of rooms buried under the mall, accessible thru the plaza. It becomes a sort of giant playground for the public.

 

Anyhow, the main point that I am interested in, and which seems consistent in my explorations until now is the idea/process of "revealing". Revealing occurs on many levels: in one's own personal encounter with a work of art, the way that the building on such a high profile site must be revealed/concealed, in a city where specatator and spectacle is so important this fine hinge between seeing & being seen is essential, etc.

 

On another level, and this might just be a purging of thoughts in my own head, the sunken plaza can act as an outdoor ampitheater of sorts, contributing to this theater aspect of the intervention (wouldn't a.p.g be proud?) From Wikipedia:In “Art and Objecthood,” Michael Fried derisively labels art that acknowledges the viewer as “theatrical” . There is a strong parallel between installation and theater: both play to a viewer who is expected to be at once immersed in the sensory/narrative experience that surrounds him and maintain a degree of self-identity as a viewer. The traditional theatergoer does not forget that he has come in from outside to sit and take in a created experience; a trademark of installation art has been the curious and eager viewer, still aware that he is in an exhibition setting and tentatively exploring the novel universe of the installation.

  

Anyhow, enough rambling for me, here's a quick little animation of some of these thoughts coming together.

Studio Photoshoot at The Barebone Studio.

Testing Testing n Clicking Clicking.

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