View allAll Photos Tagged swankolab

Techcrunch reported Synthetic Corp which makes Hypstamtic, SwankoLab, and IncrediBooth has moved from Chicago to San Francisco & they've bought a two-story building at 74 Langton they'll move into in February 2011.

 

It will be "both a worldwide headquarters and a retail/gallery space where events will be held for their community."

 

The co-founders moved to SF in July and have been working from NextSpace, a cowering space at 28 2nd Street.

 

techcrunch.com/2010/12/20/hipstamatic-san-francisco/

  

syntheticcorp.com

 

From the official press release:

 

“We are incredibly excited to be setting up shop in San Francisco...” said Lucas Allen Buick, CEO, Co-Founder, Synthetic Corp. “Now, having this building will give us a chance to interact with our community in person and give users a place to display work, hold photoshoots, and be creative.”

 

www.prweb.com/releases/prweboffice-space/san-francisco/pr...

 

Architect Douglas Burnham, of Envelope A+D will be renovating the building.

 

www.envelopead.com/info_teambio.html

 

He also renovated Pier 24, the largest photo exhibition space in the US

 

www.envelopead.com/proj_pier24.html

 

www.pier24.org

 

I had stopped by Electric Works which was nearby, so I took some photos of 74 with Hipstamatic, 360, and my D7000.

 

Also a few things nearby. It is around the corner from Brainwash & near Sightglass coffee.

  

It was listed along with 80 Langton the building next door. People were working on renovating 80 and one said they'd been working for about a month and a half and it had been bought by artists (it used to be owned by artists - see the info on New Langton below).

 

He'd heard 74 might have sold, but didn't know who bought it.

 

Listings say 74 is 3600 square feet and was on the market for just under a million dollars.

 

www.loopnet.com/Listing/16686317/74-80-Langton-Street-San...

  

And this PDF has the floor plans on the second page.

 

www.starboardnet.com/listing_flyers/74%20langton_sale.pdf

 

A planning department PDF says it is a historic building built in 1908 and used by a casket manufacturer according to a 1950 map.

 

sf-planning.org/ftp/files/gis/SouthSoMa/Docs/3730%20104.pdf

 

There's an interior tour video of 74 & 80 Langton

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=JN0tObJQn0U

 

And another video with really cheesy music

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=vY8FyJIFJFU

 

www.loopnet.com/Listing/16686317/74-80-Langton-Street-San...

 

www.prepress.com used to be at 74 (it is now on 11th st). They did prepress for make magazine - 74 Langton is listed on this page

 

makezine.com/advertise/print_specs.csp

  

New Langton Arts which sadly closed in 2009 was originally called 80 Langton Street and was located there from 1975 - 1983.

 

From an oral history of Susan Miller

 

"1975 actually, in a warehouse space on Langton Street. It was, in fact, an old casket factory in a light-industrial building of the kind common to San Francisco’s South of Market district. The building and facility were owned by a founder, artist Jock Reynolds. The gallery and theater shared one space in a loft rented from Jock by artist and founding member Jim Pomeroy."

 

www.as-ap.org/oralhistories/interviews/interview-susan-mi...

 

www.usamuseum.org/new-langton-arts/

 

blog.sfmoma.org/2009/10/tz-on-pomeroy/

 

And this is an interesting piece by Miller on New Langton (which often showed photography) (pdf)

 

sites.cca.edu/currents/pdf/smiller.pdf

 

Langton Labs, a live/work warehouse space is not far away at 9 Langton (and another space across the street which used to be a photography studio)

 

blog.langtonlabs.org

 

www.flickr.com/photos/oddwick/5246535163/

 

online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703572404575634904...

 

www.flickr.com/photos/glasser/sets/72157608097124770/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/glasser/collections/72157611567859974/

Ok, so I'm a geek :(

 

Chart showing the effects of SwankoLab Chemicals individually. The black and white original (top left) shows the colour effects quite clearly.

 

Just following in the footsteps of Gladly Beyond's Test Chart

PS Mobile, FocalLab, Swankolab: Fantabra Magic Cool (once again), SwankoDev H1N, Vinny´s BL04 (once again)

Remixing for fotogriPhone *Editing LAB* 11-19 April 2011

Original photo by Lu_17

Apps used: picfx + LensLight + Dynamic Light + TouchRetouch + Camera+ + SwankoLab

Bourke St Arcade, Melbourne, VIC

 

Twitter and Tumblr and Street Photographers

iPhone 4

Apps:

Hipstamatic

Iris Photo Suite

Juxtaposer

Swankolab

Film Lab

Take a look at my website at www.emilianoseveroni.eu

  

547.

 

Federica's garden in Collefabbri (PG). Taken with an Apple iPhone, processed with Tiltshift, Swankolab and Plastic Bullet apps.

 

See it on black.

Wakoushi, Saitama

iPhone Hipstamatic+SwankoLab

和光市駅ホーム、乗り過ごして電車待ち

Day 100 in a year of finding faces. Woop.

iPhone 4

Apps:

Filterstorm

Swankolab

Iris Photo Suite

Camera+

The Folsom entrance is just around the corner.

 

Techcrunch reported Synthetic Corp which makes Hypstamtic, SwankoLab, and IncrediBooth has moved from Chicago to San Francisco & they've bought a two-story building at 74 Langton they'll move into in February 2011.

 

It will be "both a worldwide headquarters and a retail/gallery space where events will be held for their community."

 

The co-founders moved to SF in July and have been working from NextSpace, a cowering space at 28 2nd Street.

 

techcrunch.com/2010/12/20/hipstamatic-san-francisco/

  

syntheticcorp.com

 

From the official press release:

 

“We are incredibly excited to be setting up shop in San Francisco...” said Lucas Allen Buick, CEO, Co-Founder, Synthetic Corp. “Now, having this building will give us a chance to interact with our community in person and give users a place to display work, hold photoshoots, and be creative.”

 

www.prweb.com/releases/prweboffice-space/san-francisco/pr...

 

Architect Douglas Burnham, of Envelope A+D will be renovating the building.

 

www.envelopead.com/info_teambio.html

 

He also renovated Pier 24, the largest photo exhibition space in the US

 

www.envelopead.com/proj_pier24.html

 

www.pier24.org

 

I had stopped by Electric Works which was nearby, so I took some photos of 74 with Hipstamatic, 360, and my D7000.

 

Also a few things nearby. It is around the corner from Brainwash & near Sightglass coffee.

  

It was listed along with 80 Langton the building next door. People were working on renovating 80 and one said they'd been working for about a month and a half and it had been bought by artists (it used to be owned by artists - see the info on New Langton below).

 

He'd heard 74 might have sold, but didn't know who bought it.

 

Listings say 74 is 3600 square feet and was on the market for just under a million dollars.

 

www.loopnet.com/Listing/16686317/74-80-Langton-Street-San...

  

And this PDF has the floor plans on the second page.

 

www.starboardnet.com/listing_flyers/74 langton_sale.pdf

 

A planning department PDF says it is a historic building built in 1908 and used by a casket manufacturer according to a 1950 map.

 

sf-planning.org/ftp/files/gis/SouthSoMa/Docs/3730 104.pdf

 

There's an interior tour video of 74 & 80 Langton

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=JN0tObJQn0U

 

And another video with really cheesy music

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=vY8FyJIFJFU

 

www.loopnet.com/Listing/16686317/74-80-Langton-Street-San...

 

www.prepress.com used to be at 74 (it is now on 11th st). They did prepress for make magazine - 74 Langton is listed on this page

 

makezine.com/advertise/print_specs.csp

  

New Langton Arts which sadly closed in 2009 was originally called 80 Langton Street and was located there from 1975 - 1983.

 

From an oral history of Susan Miller

 

"1975 actually, in a warehouse space on Langton Street. It was, in fact, an old casket factory in a light-industrial building of the kind common to San Francisco’s South of Market district. The building and facility were owned by a founder, artist Jock Reynolds. The gallery and theater shared one space in a loft rented from Jock by artist and founding member Jim Pomeroy."

 

www.as-ap.org/oralhistories/interviews/interview-susan-mi...

 

www.usamuseum.org/new-langton-arts/

 

blog.sfmoma.org/2009/10/tz-on-pomeroy/

 

And this is an interesting piece by Miller on New Langton (which often showed photography) (pdf)

 

sites.cca.edu/currents/pdf/smiller.pdf

 

Langton Labs, a live/work warehouse space is not far away at 9 Langton (and another space across the street which used to be a photography studio)

 

blog.langtonlabs.org

 

www.flickr.com/photos/oddwick/5246535163/

 

online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703572404575634904...

 

www.flickr.com/photos/glasser/sets/72157608097124770/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/glasser/collections/72157611567859974/

Claunch plus Swankolab

Shot with hipstamatic and then swankoed

Berlin-Kreuzberg, Künstlerhaus Bethanien

(former hospital)

Techcrunch reported Synthetic Corp which makes Hypstamtic, SwankoLab, and IncrediBooth has moved from Chicago to San Francisco & they've bought a two-story building at 74 Langton they'll move into in February 2011.

 

It will be "both a worldwide headquarters and a retail/gallery space where events will be held for their community."

 

The co-founders moved to SF in July and have been working from NextSpace, a cowering space at 28 2nd Street.

 

techcrunch.com/2010/12/20/hipstamatic-san-francisco/

  

syntheticcorp.com

 

From the official press release:

 

“We are incredibly excited to be setting up shop in San Francisco...” said Lucas Allen Buick, CEO, Co-Founder, Synthetic Corp. “Now, having this building will give us a chance to interact with our community in person and give users a place to display work, hold photoshoots, and be creative.”

 

www.prweb.com/releases/prweboffice-space/san-francisco/pr...

 

Architect Douglas Burnham, of Envelope A+D will be renovating the building.

 

www.envelopead.com/info_teambio.html

 

He also renovated Pier 24, the largest photo exhibition space in the US

 

www.envelopead.com/proj_pier24.html

 

www.pier24.org

 

I had stopped by Electric Works which was nearby, so I took some photos of 74 with Hipstamatic, 360, and my D7000.

 

Also a few things nearby. It is around the corner from Brainwash & near Sightglass coffee.

  

It was listed along with 80 Langton the building next door. People were working on renovating 80 and one said they'd been working for about a month and a half and it had been bought by artists (it used to be owned by artists - see the info on New Langton below).

 

He'd heard 74 might have sold, but didn't know who bought it.

 

Listings say 74 is 3600 square feet and was on the market for just under a million dollars.

 

www.loopnet.com/Listing/16686317/74-80-Langton-Street-San...

  

And this PDF has the floor plans on the second page.

 

www.starboardnet.com/listing_flyers/74%20langton_sale.pdf

 

A planning department PDF says it is a historic building built in 1908 and used by a casket manufacturer according to a 1950 map.

 

sf-planning.org/ftp/files/gis/SouthSoMa/Docs/3730%20104.pdf

 

There's an interior tour video of 74 & 80 Langton

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=JN0tObJQn0U

 

And another video with really cheesy music

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=vY8FyJIFJFU

 

www.loopnet.com/Listing/16686317/74-80-Langton-Street-San...

 

www.prepress.com used to be at 74 (it is now on 11th st). They did prepress for make magazine - 74 Langton is listed on this page

 

makezine.com/advertise/print_specs.csp

  

New Langton Arts which sadly closed in 2009 was originally called 80 Langton Street and was located there from 1975 - 1983.

 

From an oral history of Susan Miller

 

"1975 actually, in a warehouse space on Langton Street. It was, in fact, an old casket factory in a light-industrial building of the kind common to San Francisco’s South of Market district. The building and facility were owned by a founder, artist Jock Reynolds. The gallery and theater shared one space in a loft rented from Jock by artist and founding member Jim Pomeroy."

 

www.as-ap.org/oralhistories/interviews/interview-susan-mi...

 

www.usamuseum.org/new-langton-arts/

 

blog.sfmoma.org/2009/10/tz-on-pomeroy/

 

And this is an interesting piece by Miller on New Langton (which often showed photography) (pdf)

 

sites.cca.edu/currents/pdf/smiller.pdf

 

Langton Labs, a live/work warehouse space is not far away at 9 Langton (and another space across the street which used to be a photography studio)

 

blog.langtonlabs.org

 

www.flickr.com/photos/oddwick/5246535163/

 

online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703572404575634904...

 

www.flickr.com/photos/glasser/sets/72157608097124770/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/glasser/collections/72157611567859974/

Camera: iPhone 4

Post work: SwankoLab app

iPhone 4

Apps:

Filterstorm

Swankolab

Bad Camera

Iris Photo Suite

Sion and I both love our iPhones. A LOT. They've changed both of our lives in very dramatic and positive ways. That's pretty impressive for a little device that fits in your pocket!

 

Taking photos with his iPhone reignited Sion's passion for photography in general. And he's gotten a lot of attention for his "iPhoneography," which has opened up a lot of doors for him. But he's beginning to wonder if he's limiting himself by being faithful to just one device...

 

I think he (and I) will always take shots with our iPhones. We both love the kind of sneaky street portraits we can get with them which we wouldn't be able to do with most other cameras. For me, at least, I doubt I will ever bother with carrying around a regular camera. It's more difficult for me, and so the iPhone is enough. But for Sion, he would very much like to expand his "arsenal" of what to shoot with -- and I think he should!

 

The iPhone spotlight has been great, but it's time to focus on getting the best images possible...no matter what the device used to get it. I can't wait to see what else he produces....

 

Posted & Photographed by: Anton

Location: The bar at the Knitting Factory, Brooklyn

Camera: iPhone 4 + SwankoLab (Fresh Baked Donuts formula)

My cat, Ginger.

 

Taken with Hipstamatic and processed with Swankolab.

IPhone, Hipstamatic & SwankoLab

Often the easiest way would be to follow the majority, to roll over with the mass and don't let your voice be heard above the rest...

 

But there are some who like to swim up the river, like urban salmons... like voices and spirits that rebel against what everyone does and dream of doing what they think and feel...

 

Are you a salmon or a follower?

 

Broadway and 50th St,

New York

 

Taken with a 3Gs iPhone using Camera Bag app (Helga style) and processed with SwankoLab app (Fantabra Magic Cool + Jerry's Developer)

Facebook || @josh_hofer || Instagram || Google+

 

I was walking back to my car yesterday morning in downtown Raleigh and saw these signs stapled to a bunch of wood against an abandoned building. Seeing this made my morning. I've heard that the person that puts these up might be a regular at Slims in downtown Raleigh -- so well done person who goes to Slims a lot!

 

I posted this last night on my Facebook & Instagram and got a bunch of requests for prints, if anyone else is interested in buying one shoot me a message via Facebook or here on Flickr.

  

Here's to hoping this doesn't end up all over Tumblr with no link back to this source...

  

Here is my workflow if anyone is interested:

 

Camera+ Scenes:

1. Auto

 

Swankolab Formula Used:

1. Fantabra Magic Warm

2. Fantabra Magic Warm

3. Vinny's BL94

 

picfx:

I used a texture, but I don't remember what one now :(

  

Twitter: @josh_hofer

Instagram: Search for the user name josh_hofer

2013.06.12

伊那市 焼肉のいたや

 

iPhone 5,ToyCamera,SwankoLab

Developed in SwankoLab for iPhone using Vinny's BL04, Zero, and Flamoz Fixer

NYC // marathon 2010 // Queens

Techcrunch reported Synthetic Corp which makes Hypstamtic, SwankoLab, and IncrediBooth has moved from Chicago to San Francisco & they've bought a two-story building at 74 Langton they'll move into in February 2011.

 

It will be "both a worldwide headquarters and a retail/gallery space where events will be held for their community."

 

The co-founders moved to SF in July and have been working from NextSpace, a cowering space at 28 2nd Street.

 

techcrunch.com/2010/12/20/hipstamatic-san-francisco/

  

syntheticcorp.com

 

From the official press release:

 

“We are incredibly excited to be setting up shop in San Francisco...” said Lucas Allen Buick, CEO, Co-Founder, Synthetic Corp. “Now, having this building will give us a chance to interact with our community in person and give users a place to display work, hold photoshoots, and be creative.”

 

www.prweb.com/releases/prweboffice-space/san-francisco/pr...

 

Architect Douglas Burnham, of Envelope A+D will be renovating the building.

 

www.envelopead.com/info_teambio.html

 

He also renovated Pier 24, the largest photo exhibition space in the US

 

www.envelopead.com/proj_pier24.html

 

www.pier24.org

 

I had stopped by Electric Works which was nearby, so I took some photos of 74 with Hipstamatic, 360, and my D7000.

 

Also a few things nearby. It is around the corner from Brainwash & near Sightglass coffee.

  

It was listed along with 80 Langton the building next door. People were working on renovating 80 and one said they'd been working for about a month and a half and it had been bought by artists (it used to be owned by artists - see the info on New Langton below).

 

He'd heard 74 might have sold, but didn't know who bought it.

 

Listings say 74 is 3600 square feet and was on the market for just under a million dollars.

 

www.loopnet.com/Listing/16686317/74-80-Langton-Street-San...

  

And this PDF has the floor plans on the second page.

 

www.starboardnet.com/listing_flyers/74 langton_sale.pdf

 

A planning department PDF says it is a historic building built in 1908 and used by a casket manufacturer according to a 1950 map.

 

sf-planning.org/ftp/files/gis/SouthSoMa/Docs/3730 104.pdf

 

There's an interior tour video of 74 & 80 Langton

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=JN0tObJQn0U

 

And another video with really cheesy music

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=vY8FyJIFJFU

 

www.loopnet.com/Listing/16686317/74-80-Langton-Street-San...

 

www.prepress.com used to be at 74 (it is now on 11th st). They did prepress for make magazine - 74 Langton is listed on this page

 

makezine.com/advertise/print_specs.csp

  

New Langton Arts which sadly closed in 2009 was originally called 80 Langton Street and was located there from 1975 - 1983.

 

From an oral history of Susan Miller

 

"1975 actually, in a warehouse space on Langton Street. It was, in fact, an old casket factory in a light-industrial building of the kind common to San Francisco’s South of Market district. The building and facility were owned by a founder, artist Jock Reynolds. The gallery and theater shared one space in a loft rented from Jock by artist and founding member Jim Pomeroy."

 

www.as-ap.org/oralhistories/interviews/interview-susan-mi...

 

www.usamuseum.org/new-langton-arts/

 

blog.sfmoma.org/2009/10/tz-on-pomeroy/

 

And this is an interesting piece by Miller on New Langton (which often showed photography) (pdf)

 

sites.cca.edu/currents/pdf/smiller.pdf

 

Langton Labs, a live/work warehouse space is not far away at 9 Langton (and another space across the street which used to be a photography studio)

 

blog.langtonlabs.org

 

www.flickr.com/photos/oddwick/5246535163/

 

online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703572404575634904...

 

www.flickr.com/photos/glasser/sets/72157608097124770/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/glasser/collections/72157611567859974/

Techcrunch reported Synthetic Corp which makes Hypstamtic, SwankoLab, and IncrediBooth has moved from Chicago to San Francisco & they've bought a two-story building at 74 Langton they'll move into in February 2011.

 

It will be "both a worldwide headquarters and a retail/gallery space where events will be held for their community."

 

The co-founders moved to SF in July and have been working from NextSpace, a cowering space at 28 2nd Street.

 

techcrunch.com/2010/12/20/hipstamatic-san-francisco/

  

syntheticcorp.com

 

From the official press release:

 

“We are incredibly excited to be setting up shop in San Francisco...” said Lucas Allen Buick, CEO, Co-Founder, Synthetic Corp. “Now, having this building will give us a chance to interact with our community in person and give users a place to display work, hold photoshoots, and be creative.”

 

www.prweb.com/releases/prweboffice-space/san-francisco/pr...

 

Architect Douglas Burnham, of Envelope A+D will be renovating the building.

 

www.envelopead.com/info_teambio.html

 

He also renovated Pier 24, the largest photo exhibition space in the US

 

www.envelopead.com/proj_pier24.html

 

www.pier24.org

 

I had stopped by Electric Works which was nearby, so I took some photos of 74 with Hipstamatic, 360, and my D7000.

 

Also a few things nearby. It is around the corner from Brainwash & near Sightglass coffee.

  

It was listed along with 80 Langton the building next door. People were working on renovating 80 and one said they'd been working for about a month and a half and it had been bought by artists (it used to be owned by artists - see the info on New Langton below).

 

He'd heard 74 might have sold, but didn't know who bought it.

 

Listings say 74 is 3600 square feet and was on the market for just under a million dollars.

 

www.loopnet.com/Listing/16686317/74-80-Langton-Street-San...

  

And this PDF has the floor plans on the second page.

 

www.starboardnet.com/listing_flyers/74 langton_sale.pdf

 

A planning department PDF says it is a historic building built in 1908 and used by a casket manufacturer according to a 1950 map.

 

sf-planning.org/ftp/files/gis/SouthSoMa/Docs/3730 104.pdf

 

There's an interior tour video of 74 & 80 Langton

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=JN0tObJQn0U

 

And another video with really cheesy music

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=vY8FyJIFJFU

 

www.loopnet.com/Listing/16686317/74-80-Langton-Street-San...

 

www.prepress.com used to be at 74 (it is now on 11th st). They did prepress for make magazine - 74 Langton is listed on this page

 

makezine.com/advertise/print_specs.csp

  

New Langton Arts which sadly closed in 2009 was originally called 80 Langton Street and was located there from 1975 - 1983.

 

From an oral history of Susan Miller

 

"1975 actually, in a warehouse space on Langton Street. It was, in fact, an old casket factory in a light-industrial building of the kind common to San Francisco’s South of Market district. The building and facility were owned by a founder, artist Jock Reynolds. The gallery and theater shared one space in a loft rented from Jock by artist and founding member Jim Pomeroy."

 

www.as-ap.org/oralhistories/interviews/interview-susan-mi...

 

www.usamuseum.org/new-langton-arts/

 

blog.sfmoma.org/2009/10/tz-on-pomeroy/

 

And this is an interesting piece by Miller on New Langton (which often showed photography) (pdf)

 

sites.cca.edu/currents/pdf/smiller.pdf

 

Langton Labs, a live/work warehouse space is not far away at 9 Langton (and another space across the street which used to be a photography studio)

 

blog.langtonlabs.org

 

www.flickr.com/photos/oddwick/5246535163/

 

online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703572404575634904...

 

www.flickr.com/photos/glasser/sets/72157608097124770/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/glasser/collections/72157611567859974/

Maybe this isn't a modern bathroom but I'm sure surprised at what catches my idea during a potty break.

Swanko A19 Developer -- Swanko H1N Developer -- Fantabra Warm -- Fantabra Cool

 

Larry's Develop -- Jerry's Developer -- Mineco Sapphire -- Mineco Ruby

 

Mineco Emerald -- Noir -- Grizzle FX -- Flamoz Fixer

 

Zero -- Vinny Vignette WA12 -- Vinny Vignette C034 -- Vinny VIgnette BL04

Daily App Experiment 396: "Follow the Yellow Brick" - Ran this photo through #shockmypic for the squiggly effect, then through #swankolab for vignetting effect... Then used #blender to mix the Swankolab and original back together (because the vignetting was a bit too much). #appsperiment #daily_appsperiment

Shibuya, Tokyo

iPhone Photo fx+Lo-Mob+Pic grunger+SwankoLab+PhotoCopier

Surprised? Not me!

 

First: Out of pocket expenses for the two dental related visits & prescriptions - $150

 

Follow up charges to complete procedures (a redo of an old root canal, a general cleaning, and a potential new root canal, plus any necessary prescriptions - $1,500+

 

Secondly: Beyond me & my issues, Evelyn had to be taken back to the doctor today. She's still running fever & feeling sick. Dr. Rhodes gave her a Rocephin shot & we're to administer drops in her right ear for a blockage on that tube.

 

Scary parent moment was when the nurse checked her temp & it read 105.6. Guess who got stripped down & received a tepid bath in the pediatrician's breakroom sink? They gave her both Motein & Tylenol & her temp dropped down to 102, so Pawpaw & Mawmaw took her in home.

 

The sun will come out tomorrow... ♪

North Melbourne Station, VIC

 

I am now on Twitter and Tumblr

 

Little pond off the freeway.

Techcrunch reported Synthetic Corp which makes Hypstamtic, SwankoLab, and IncrediBooth has moved from Chicago to San Francisco & they've bought a two-story building at 74 Langton they'll move into in February 2011.

 

It will be "both a worldwide headquarters and a retail/gallery space where events will be held for their community."

 

The co-founders moved to SF in July and have been working from NextSpace, a coworking space at 28 2nd Street.

 

techcrunch.com/2010/12/20/hipstamatic-san-francisco/

  

syntheticcorp.com

 

From the official press release:

 

“We are incredibly excited to be setting up shop in San Francisco...” said Lucas Allen Buick, CEO, Co-Founder, Synthetic Corp. “Now, having this building will give us a chance to interact with our community in person and give users a place to display work, hold photoshoots, and be creative.”

 

www.prweb.com/releases/prweboffice-space/san-francisco/pr...

 

Architect Douglas Burnham, of Envelope A+D will be renovating the building.

 

www.envelopead.com/info_teambio.html

 

He also renovated Pier 24, the largest photo exhibition space in the US

 

www.envelopead.com/proj_pier24.html

 

www.pier24.org

 

I had stopped by Electric Works which was nearby, so I took some photos of 74 with Hipstamatic, 360, and my D7000.

 

Also a few things nearby. It is around the corner from Brainwash & near Sightglass coffee.

  

It was listed along with 80 Langton the building next door. People were working on renovating 80 and one said they'd been working for about a month and a half and it had been bought by artists (it used to be owned by artists - see the info on New Langton below).

 

He'd heard 74 might have sold, but didn't know who bought it.

 

Listings say 74 is 3600 square feet and was on the market for just under a million dollars.

 

www.loopnet.com/Listing/16686317/74-80-Langton-Street-San...

  

And this PDF has the floor plans on the second page.

 

www.starboardnet.com/listing_flyers/74 langton_sale.pdf

 

A planning department PDF says it is a historic building built in 1908 and used by a casket manufacturer according to a 1950 map.

 

sf-planning.org/ftp/files/gis/SouthSoMa/Docs/3730 104.pdf

 

There's an interior tour video of 74 & 80 Langton

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=JN0tObJQn0U

 

And another video with really cheesy music

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=vY8FyJIFJFU

 

www.loopnet.com/Listing/16686317/74-80-Langton-Street-San...

 

www.prepress.com used to be at 74 (it is now on 11th st). They did prepress for make magazine - 74 Langton is listed on this page

 

makezine.com/advertise/print_specs.csp

  

New Langton Arts which sadly closed in 2009 was originally called 80 Langton Street and was located there from 1975 - 1983.

 

From an oral history of Susan Miller

 

"1975 actually, in a warehouse space on Langton Street. It was, in fact, an old casket factory in a light-industrial building of the kind common to San Francisco’s South of Market district. The building and facility were owned by a founder, artist Jock Reynolds. The gallery and theater shared one space in a loft rented from Jock by artist and founding member Jim Pomeroy."

 

www.as-ap.org/oralhistories/interviews/interview-susan-mi...

 

www.usamuseum.org/new-langton-arts/

 

blog.sfmoma.org/2009/10/tz-on-pomeroy/

 

And this is an interesting piece by Miller on New Langton (which often showed photography) (pdf)

 

sites.cca.edu/currents/pdf/smiller.pdf

 

Langton Labs, a live/work warehouse space is not far away at 9 Langton (and another space across the street which used to be a photography studio)

 

blog.langtonlabs.org

 

www.flickr.com/photos/oddwick/5246535163/

 

online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703572404575634904...

 

www.flickr.com/photos/glasser/sets/72157608097124770/

 

www.flickr.com/photos/glasser/collections/72157611567859974/

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