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Technique découverte par hasard et faisant partie intégrante du mouvement "lomographique", le redscale donnera a vos photos une ambiance chaude et apocalyptique comme nul autre film !!!

 

Après avoir fait subir un traitement "Redscale" a ce film 400 ISO périmé a souhait issu du principal fabriquant américain, yOuKfOu, un artiste belge réputé dans le monde du street art et de la photographie a customisé, signé et numéroté chaque pellicule "Rediculous" de cette série limitée a seulement 250 exemplaires !!!

 

( Ce film est conditionné pour être tiré a 100 ISO )

 

Photos: yOuKfOu.

 

Appareil-photo: Yashica Samurai ( Half-frame ).

 

Film: Rediculous, tiré a 100 ISO.

  

This "redscale" technique was discovered accidentally and is a big part of the lomographic movement. Redscale gives your pictures an apocalyptic atmosphere like no other film can.

 

These are perfectly expired rolls of ISO 400 film from the major U.S. manufacturer, but after the redscale torture treatment by yOuKfOu, it should be shot at ISO 100 for optimum results.

 

yOuKfOu, a notorious Belgian street artist and photographer, has hand-drawn, signed and numbered every Rediculous roll from this limited edition of 250 examples. Making each roll a one-of-a-kind piece of art.

  

Pictures: yOuKfOu.

 

Camera: Yashica Samurai ( Half-frame ).

 

Film: Rediculous, shot at 100 ISO.

 

Chantier naval de Marseille, novembre 2017

 

© S.Sauerzapfe

Stop telling me LEGO is blocky and rectangular. It's totally 7-sided. At least the things I build are. Having gone to an American public school, I had to look up that this is called a heptagon ( en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heptagon )

 

The parts used here are all Znap - motor holders, beams, and hinge-connector thingys.

In the relaxation area of the island, visitors are able to learn ways to help manage their PTSD symptoms as demonstrated by the lifeguard pictured here. When touched by your avatar, this simulation human will proceed to teach different relaxation techniques.

SuDoc I 49.28:240 Fish and Wildlife Service fishery leaflet 240, published in 1947. Fishery leaflets described fishing techniques, seafood processing, and even recipes. While most leaflets have either no cover or a generic one, this one has a nice woodcut cover illustration.

BERLIN/GERMANY - OCTOBER 27: Eva Schatz (Kuniri) introduces her integration project to the audience during the DLD (Digital Life Design) Conference in Berlin, BOLLE Festsäle. Copyright: picture alliance for DLD / Kai-Uwe Wärner | Verwendung weltweit

 

Free Press Images (editorial use only!)

Chantier naval de Marseille, novembre 2017

 

© S.Sauerzapfe

First attempt at a digital approximation of Orton on a Mach 1 Mustang.

 

Technique used in PSCS2 was: www.pcin.net/update/index.php/2006/11/01/the-orton-effect...

Chantier naval de Marseille, novembre 2017

 

© S.Sauerzapfe

Chantier naval de Marseille, novembre 2017

 

© S.Sauerzapfe

Images Taken on the first and third nights. AngGratte Ciel’s “La Place des Anges”, a French aerial spectacular, Botanic Park WOMADelaide 9-12 March 2018 What was your background before becoming Artistic Director at Gratte Ciel?

I come from a mountain culture. I lived in the Alps for 15 years, in a region where we did a lot of climbing and cave exploration. The techniques that we use in the La Place des Anges, come from mountain climbing and we used those rope techniques from Alpism to serve in the 3rd dimension, in the sky, because the rope allows us to move in external dimensions, which are not those of a stage in a tent and allows us, especially, to move in the sky. So from the moment where we wait for the rope in the sky, it’s as if we can be close to the sky to mark the places in which the acrobats are going to slide, dance with dramatic movement, which is that it will be very fast, or very slow, all while suspended in air.

And have you also done that or have you always been on the artistic direction side?

I practiced climbing for a very long time but I have always done it in parallel to performances because I have always wanted to use the technique to serve a sensitivity of movement or to be able to create the sensation of being in the air near the audience.

How long have you been with Gratte Ciel?

Gratte Ciel is a company which has been doing this production for 5 years but we created the show, Pierrot Bidon and I, 10 years ago and we have worked with some of the rope performance artists in the team together for 25 years.

Describe La Place des Anges for us.

The show La Place des Anges is a bit like a big joke, as if a clown appears in the sky with his suitcase, placing his feet like a monkey in a tree. So, he places his feet like a monkey in a tree, while stumbling his suitcase will open and from his suitcase feathers will fall. Then another character will arrive with an umbrella and he too will release some feathers. Little by little, it’s like a group of friends, who are angels, appear above the audience, dispersing a few feathers just to see the audience’s reaction, like a surprise. Then there will be more and more feathers and more and more feathers until we have completely filled the sky with a storm of feathers. It’s a show which is about fraternity and then also a pacifist allegory. It’s as if the tonne of feathers was a tonne of tenderness from the angels spread onto the audience.

Do you pick up the feathers for the next show or do they stay on the ground?

No, we don’t pick them up. They stay on the audience who pick them up – people play with them and then they put them in their pocket. People often tell me that the feathers – there’s always a little handful that they take home and put in a little corner – in a chimney, on a little table as a souvenir they will keep for years.

How many kilogrammes of feathers are you bringing with you to Australia?

4 tonnes for the 4 shows. These are feathers that are used in winter clothing or quilts. We have changed the utilisation for these feathers to create a show.

How many people are in and behind the scenes for the show?

The team is 32 people – there are 16 acrobats in the air on the ropes. The others are technicians and the production team.

What are the challenges in travelling with such a show with so many people, 4 tonnes of feathers, the ropes and all of that?

The principal challenge is that in each place, the show is the same in its duration and the same in what it tells but the installation of the ropes is going to be very different because when we are in the city we attach the ropes to buildings. In the case of WOMADelaide, we are going to be in Botanic Park so it is an environment of trees – so it’s like the demography, the décor isn’t chosen by us but is imposed by the place where we work so we have to re-write the show technically to be able to find the soul of the performance with a technical situation which is always different. It’s such that we don’t say “we are going to play in Adelaide”; we speak of “the experience of Adelaide”. Like in each city, it’s a unique experience because we are going to be higher or lower, the grounds are bigger or smaller, we are going to be closer to the audience… It’s a bit like a piece of jazz – in each moment there is a bit of improvisation – except that the improvisation is worked upon – but there is a large part of uniqueness each time. That is to say that the audience that is going to see the show in Adelaide will be different to the audience that will have seen it in Perth or in London or in Arles. The emotion will stay the same but the visual experience will be different.

How long will it take to install the ropes etc. in Botanic Park in Adelaide?

We need 4 days to install.

You are going to Perth?

No, we have played in Perth.

So this time in Australia it’s only WOMADelaide that you’re coming to?

Yes, that’s absolutely right.

How do you manage acrobat’s injuries if they happen?

There are no injuries. We have never had one – because we take a lot, a lot of time to do things little by little and we have protocols so that things are done step by step to be very prudent. Plus there is a great deal of experience amongst the team – the pillars of the team have worked together on the ropes for 25 years and we have never had an accident. The goal is not to push the limits to the extreme – it’s to be very comfortable with what we are doing in the air. We are not going to show something spectacular or dangerous to the audience but we are going to show something with which we are very comfortable to come closer to touching a magical side.

And in your team, how old are the youngest and eldest?

The youngest is 18 and the oldest is 52.

What does the show evoke in the crowd?

It’s a pacifist allegory. That is to say that it is a show where the feathers – it’s like we poured a tonne of tenderness, a tonne of love, and the audience is underneath a storm of beauty and softness. They will look at their neighbor with a different view. They will be transported by this euphoria and at the end of the show, people kiss and take each other in their arms. Elderly people cry having the impression they are reliving their childhood, children have wide curious eyes because they see the happiness and happy shouting of the adults. The emotions are that strong.

Why should people come to see the show?

It’s a unique experience. The show is short but we remember it for the rest of our lives. It’s true, it’s not publicity. This isn’t simply a show, it’s an experience of life’s happiness.

Is there anything else you’d like to tell us?

Yes, I think that it is important to know that the aerial dimension in which we work, and especially the simplicity with which the artists fly through the air then come down close to the audience, breaks down the barrier between the performers and the audience. We change the relationship that the audience can have with the artists and it’s significant because the performers come from underneath trees from 50 metres in height to 200 metres in distance and at the same time they come down to have individual rapport with the audience. Therefore we are completely changing what audiences are used to perceiving in a traditional show.

 

Chantier naval de Marseille - novembre 2018

 

© S.Sauerzapfe

Girolata, forme de radoub, Marseille, novembre 2016.

Girolata, forme de radoub, Marseille, novembre 2016.

Not my image but BCC Monoist Special Interest Group set a challenge to process this image from another member. Work carried out in LR to bring detail out of the shadows and in Photoshop to give a great sense of the magnitude of the interior.

Chantier naval de Marseille - novembre 2018

 

© S.Sauerzapfe

Here is a new set of LEGO ideas and techniques, made with LDD

I'm sure you'll find a use to this idea

I tried to make the explanation readable thanks to the colors as if we had a tutorial

 

Do not forget to watch the album with all the right techniques on your right =>

 

Find all my creations on Flickr group « News LEGO Techniques ».

This Flickr group includes:

 

- Ideas for new LEGO pieces

- Techniques for assembling bricks

- Tutorials for making accessories, objects, etc.

Girolata, forme de radoub, Marseille, novembre 2016.

I thought I never would make this technique again (watercolor on paper, with a Biiiiiiiig patience), because is very hard to do. But... well, now am I making another work.

Oh, it will be bigger than this one...

 

The image in not out of focus. The technique is just like this.

Girolata, forme de radoub, Marseille, novembre 2016.

MUNICH/GERMANY - JANUARY, 22: Fabrice Rousseau (Amazon) speaks at a panel discussion during DLD18 (Digital-Life-Design) Conference at the Bayerischer Staatsbank on January 22th, 2018 in Munich, Germany (Photo: picture alliance / Gandalf Hammerbacher) | Verwendung weltweit

Chantier naval de Marseille, novembre 2017

 

© S.Sauerzapfe

Willens demonstrates the surgical implantation of a telemetry device measuring electrocardiographic and electroencephalographic activity in a guinea pig. Willens trained veterinary surgeons from several DOD laboratories in a technique he developed to implant the telemetry transmitters to augment studies examining the adverse effects of biological and chemical agents. (U.S. Army photo)

7 Days of Shooting ... More than 10 ... Technique Tuesday (HDR)

High-dynamic-range imaging is a techniques used in photography to reproduce a greater dynamic range of luminosity than possible using standard photographic techniques. HDR images can represent more accurately the range of intensity levels found in real scenes, from direct sunlight to faint starlight, and is captured by taking several differently exposed pictures of the same subject matter and combining them. If you have HDR effect on your camera this can be done in camera. If you don't the same result can be achieved in a photo editing program.

   

Girolata, forme de radoub, Marseille, novembre 2016.

Mind Mapping Techniques collected in a mind map. See the March 5, 2008 posting at http://ideamapping.ideamappingsuccess.com/ for full details.

Nerikomi Technique Tokoname Teapots

MUNICH/GERMANY - JANUARY 15: Carlo Ratti (MIT SENSEable City Lab) speaks at a panel discussion of the DLD17 (Digital-Life-Design) Conference at the Alte Bayerische Staatsbank on January 15, 2017 in Munich, Germany.

 

DLD is Europe's big innovation conference on Digital-Life-Design.

 

(Photo: picture alliance / Andreas Gebert) | Verwendung weltweit

BAGHDAD – Spc. Daine Watson (from right), a driver with the 501st Military Police Company, Division Special Troops Battalion, 1st Armored Division, United States Division – Center, and a St. James Cambridge, Jamaica, native; Capt. James Battle, liaison officer with the Combat Aviation Brigade, 1st Infantry Division, and a Newport News, Va., native; Capt. William Conners, an air battle captain of operations with Company A, DSTB, 1st Armd. Div., and a Wolcott, N.Y., native; and Pfc. Josiah Portukalian, a combat medic with B Co., DSTB, 1st Armd. Div., and an Orleans, Ind., native, practice their boxing technique Sept. 20 at Camp Liberty, Iraq. In preparation for the Boxing Smoker 2, Oct. 9. (U.S. Army photo by Cpl. Daniel Eddy, 196th MPAD, 1st Armd. Div., USD-C)

For full story go to ireport.cnn.com/docs/DOC-494781

Here is a new set of LEGO ideas and techniques, made with LDD

I'm sure you'll find a use to this idea

I tried to make the explanation readable thanks to the colors as if we had a tutorial

 

Do not forget to watch the album with all the right techniques on your right =>

 

Find all my creations on Flickr group « News LEGO Techniques ».

This Flickr group includes:

 

- Ideas for new LEGO pieces

- Techniques for assembling bricks

- Tutorials for making accessories, objects, etc.

Here is a new set of LEGO ideas and techniques, made with LDD

I'm sure you'll find a use to this idea

I tried to make the explanation readable thanks to the colors as if we had a tutorial

 

Do not forget to watch the album with all the right techniques on your right =>

 

Find all my creations on Flickr group « News LEGO Techniques ».

This Flickr group includes:

 

- Ideas for new LEGO pieces

- Techniques for assembling bricks

- Tutorials for making accessories, objects, etc.

Girolata, forme de radoub, Marseille, novembre 2016.

Chantier naval de Santander - janvier 2018

Here is a new set of LEGO ideas and techniques, made with LDD

I'm sure you'll find a use to this idea

I tried to make the explanation readable thanks to the colors as if we had a tutorial

 

Do not forget to watch the album with all the right techniques on your right =>

 

Find all my creations on Flickr group « News LEGO Techniques ».

This Flickr group includes:

 

- Ideas for new LEGO pieces

- Techniques for assembling bricks

- Tutorials for making accessories, objects, etc.

‘Painting Topical Techniques COMPOSITION MATTERS with Paul Taggart’ – available from artworkshopwithpaul on Vimeo – vimeo.com/ondemand/techscompositionmatters … please feel free to download these references photographs with our compliments.

 

ALSO FOR WORKING-ALONG with Paul Taggart on [Series 4] Learn to Enjoy Painting in Oils with Paul Taggart - available from #artworkshopwithpaul on #vimeo - vimeo.com/ondemand/paintinginoilsseries4

Técnicas combinadas/ Combined techniques

The technique I used on this was to first shoot it in HDR which I am a beginner at and then I added a lighting effect called soft Omni.

"7 Days of Shooting" "Week #50 - In My Own Backyard" "Technique Tuesday"

MUNICH/GERMANY - JANUARY, 22: Mariya Gabriel (European Commission) gestures while speaking in a panel discussion on stage during the DLD18 (Digital-Life-Design) Conference at the Alte Bayerische Staatsbank on January 22th, 2018 in Munich, Germany (Photo: picture alliance / Andreas Gebert) | Verwendung weltweit

I used BKF for the first time on pink. Loving the outcome.

Here is a new set of LEGO ideas and techniques, made with LDD

I'm sure you'll find a use to this idea

I tried to make the explanation readable thanks to the colors as if we had a tutorial

 

Do not forget to watch the album with all the right techniques on your right =>

 

Find all my creations on Flickr group « News LEGO Techniques ».

This Flickr group includes:

 

- Ideas for new LEGO pieces

- Techniques for assembling bricks

- Tutorials for making accessories, objects, etc.

Girolata, forme de radoub, Marseille, novembre 2016.

This technique was learned from one of Scott Kelby's generic "Digital Photography" books. It was shot at dusk with a single on-camera flash (Nikon SB700) with the white balance set to Tungsten and an orange filter over the flash-head.

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