View allAll Photos Tagged swankolab
I found this papercraft of john Gore online, I build it and let him fight all the monsters in the garden.
Take a look at my website at www.emilianoseveroni.eu
545.
Calle del Cristo in Venice. This is a 2006 picture but it's never-seen-before.
Taken with a Nikon D70, processed on an iPhone with Tiltshift, Swankolab and Plastic Bullet apps.
See it on black.
Vinny's BL04, SwankoDev H1N, and Grizzle Fix
I got a code for SwankoLab =] I really like it so far!!!
Taken with my iPhone 3G Camera, then processed with 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/
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
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)
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/
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
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)
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/
I use this train station pretty often. I am fascinated by it's beyond-utilitarian beauty.
In general, I can say that I love Zurich - a wonderful place to live and for your children to grow up in.
Shot with an iPhone 4. Slight vignetting applied with the SwankoLab app.
iPhone apps:
Hipstamatic
- Lens = Kaimal Mark II
- Film = Black Keys Super Grain
- Flash = Off
Swankolab
- Larry's Developer
- Jerry's Developer
Focal Lab
Daily App Experiment #198: "Behind The Green Door" - shot with #TrueHDR then I created mutliple copies in different hues using #photowizard. I then used #interlacer to mash up all the alternate versions. Then I used #Juxtaposer to replace re sign from the original version over the interlaced version. For the final step, I used #swankolabs to add a final filter over the entire image, which helped pull it back together into a singular piece. #appsperiment #daily_appsperiment
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/
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
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)
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/
Up came the sun, and dried up all the rain,
and the itsy bitsy spider went down the tree again.
taken with the Iphone camera for the Iphone365 project.
Edges processed with swankolab.
Chemical steps:
1. Vinny's WA12
2. Vinny's CO34
If you would like you can follow my iphone 365 project blog or on @elineart.
Thanks for looking.
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/
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
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)
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/
I left my keys in the car and I'm waiting for AAA :( Bored and fooling around with my iPhone... These are Disney cakes I saw at the supermarket. I used the Swankolab App to edit it.
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/
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
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)
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/
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
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)
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/
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
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)
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/
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
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)
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/
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
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)
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/
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
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)
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/
The battery life of my iPhone 3G is so poor. So I got a new 4S. I took this picture with new iPhone. And I added some effects with "SwankoLab". 初代iPhoneをビッグウェーブさんと同じ列に並んで購入したのはもう3年前。バッテリーの持ちが日に日に悪くなってきたので4Sに機種変更しました。快適です。プロカメラで撮影後、SwankoLabで加工してみました。
The Langton side of Brainwash is next to 80
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/
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
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)
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/
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
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)
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/
Shot with Hipstamatic. It looked great on the iPhone screen but not contrasty enough (mainly not black enough in the dark areas) despite using the allegedly high contrast film option. Put it through Swankolab to make it look like it did on the iPhone on a computer screen.
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/
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
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)
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/
Andigraf --> Swankolab. As much as I love these iPhone apps, I'm really looking forward to getting back to the Uni darkroom <3
My lovely (and very cheeky) sister. She's a worthwhile trade fr being at home...
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/
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
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)
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/
iPhone 4
Apps:
Hipstamatic
- Lens = John S
- Film = BlacKeys Supergrain
- Flash = Off
Pic Grunger
Swankolab
- Noir
- Noir
Film Lab
A quadtych of The Old Rusty Cadillac West Of Rochelle, Illinois. Four versions of the same image, each processed differently in a different iPhone app.
From left to right: Pixlr-O-Matic, Infinicam, Camera+, Swankolab, and put together with PicStitch.
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/
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
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)
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/
Photo taken with an iPhone by Dave Weekes who then sent me the original to app.
Apps:
Swankolab
Plastic Bullet
Iris Photo Suite
Photo Curves
Photodesk
Techcrunch reported Synthetic which makes Hypstamtic, SwankoLab, and IncrediBooth has moved from Chicago to San Francisco & they've bought a two-story building they'll move into in February 2011.
The article links to 74 Langton (though it still has an available sign on it). There is a larger brick building next door which is 80 Langton.
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 a temporary space.
techcrunch.com/2010/12/20/hipstamatic-san-francisco/
I had stopped by Electric Works which was nearby, so I took some photos of 74 (and some wide shots with 80) with Hipstamatic, 360 panorama, and my D7000.
Also a Firebird in front (which does not come with the building) and 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 n 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. 80 is 6300 sq ft for almost $1.5 million.
www.loopnet.com/Listing/16686317/74-80-Langton-Street-San...
This PDF has the floor plans for 74 on the second page
www.starboardnet.com/listing_flyers/74 langton_sale.pdf
A planning department PDF says 74 is a historic building built in 1908 and used by a casket manufacturer. They expanded in 1911 and added the larger 80 Langton.
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)
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/
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
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)
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/