View allAll Photos Tagged technique
Technique: Buy a handheld convex mirror, hold it in your hand, and take pictures of yourself with your friends! This may be too simple for the technique group, but I got some really cool shots with it!
Through weekly mentorship sessions, our students learn new techniques, practice old ones, and leave inspired to continue developing their artistic style.
This is a response to the artists Kensuke Koike, Anthony Zinonos and Caro Ma. I have applied techniques and processes I've studied from other artists to create an artwork inspired by their practices. I focus on transforming a portrait to serve as a background, and edit the portrait through cutting strips and rotating them instead of adding or deleting things. I really like this effect, it's clearer in the previous process photos, the focus on altering the original photos meaning. I stuck the photo of flowers over the portrait in a way that covers the bottom half of the face, and therefore accentuates the top half as if the face was hiding. I had the idea to use the portrait as a background by playing with scale and making it very big compared to the human subject in the foreground. I stuck over the flowers with harsh turquoise blue which is meant to represent a sky. I then stuck a little girl rollerblading over it. This composition is meant to present a relationship of man that wishes to invade and invalidate nature. This is why I stuck the blue over the flowers, it's like a sign of defiance or rejection. The blue is meant to feel sickly and the model in the background is meant to be a surreal component of the image to make the viewer uncomfortable like they are watching everything. Representing mans ugly qualities in contemporary society, like intruding on others matters etc. This response is simply meant to be a visualisation of the ideas concerning the brief in my head.
This artwork responds to the brief as it grotesquely manipulates man in relation to nature which peacefully is placed on the collage. This is meant to create a surreal landscape that
Sean Rhodes, along with a fellow installer, pass along techniques that they use while wrapping the Mustang during the 2010 SGIA Expo in Las Vegas, Nevads.
If you want to learn how you can become an expert installer like Sean, visit www.LowenCertified.com
Photographic techniques capture electromagnetic wavelengths beyond human vision, revealing features invisible to the naked eye. These signals are processed into interpretable forms using methods like color mapping.
Pink lacks a specific electromagnetic wavelength, while grey poses a limitation due to its representation of only intensity—a blend of light and dark without spectral specificity. Imaging techniques reliant on spectral variation produce identical results for greyscale images unless non-visible data is present. Deviations from this uniformity may indicate errors, misinterpretations, or unknown phenomena.
Contention persists over analytical debates, including dismissible claims like Van Allen belt dangers and contested evidence of lunar mirrors. The precision of laser reflections targeting a moving 3x3-foot marker on the Moon highlights technical skill but often fails to resolve skepticism. For instance, a 0.1° shift moves a laser spot 670 km across the Moon's surface.
Forensic analysis (2022, 2023) of Apollo 11–17 photographs assessed authenticity claims. Images of humans in space, Earth, and the Moon's distant views were validated, but Moon landing visuals showed variations, suggesting diverse techniques may have replicated certain elements.
PEMi (Photoelectromagnetic Image) software enhances forensic analysis by differentiating natural and artificial light sources, revealing hidden features. Each PEMi-ID links to original sources, ensuring traceability and comparison.
Further exploration is available:
Lehti, A. (2024). The Silence of Inquiry: Forensic Reflections Reveal a Crisis of Perception. figshare. doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.28078982
Credits
2022-2025 © Andrew Lehti
1961–2023 © NASA, ESA
Software: PEMi (GitHub: andylehti/PEMi.git)
Explore PEM-I: pemimage.streamlit.app
CC BY-SA 4.0 License: creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/
Research:
Lehti, Andrew (2024). Cognitive Psychology and the Education System. figshare. Collection. doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.7532079
CC BY-SA 4.0
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, PO Box 1866, Mountain View, CA 94042, USA.
Travis, Edge of Seven architect, shares the benefits of earthbag construction with local skilled laborers.
Boylan coach Joe Monarski (a.k.a. "Dr. Mo") and team alternate Julia Popp spent the day on the water, working on technique. Alas, they came up empty. (Photo by Mitch Teich.)
Using Gene Modulation Techniques in Treating HIV Infected Individuals:
There are two known genetic copies of a rare variant of a cell surface receptor that confers resistance to HIV infection by blocking attachment of HIV to the cell.
We can take those genes from a [CCR5]-Δ32 homozygous individual or make them by gene building techniques.
Transfer those genes to cell of HIV infected patients. Use newly rising methods of gene regulation by recruiting viral vectors.
Violin posture is very important to violinist technique. As with any kind of profession, technique and perfect form are important
Go to Page 56 in the Internet Archive
Title: The anaesthetic technique for operations on the nose and throat
Creator: Prenderville, Arthur de
Publisher: London : Glaisher
Sponsor: Wellcome Library
Contributor: Wellcome Library
Date: 1906
Language: eng
"Based on lectures delivered during the session 1905-6 at the North-East London Post-Graduate College"
If you have questions concerning reproductions, please contact the Contributing Library.
Note: The colors, contrast and appearance of these illustrations are unlikely to be true to life. They are derived from scanned images that have been enhanced for machine interpretation and have been altered from their originals.
Read/Download from the Internet Archive
CIFOR-ICRAF has organized a one-day training event that aims to disseminate the science-based technique and lessons learned, and to share with the various stakeholders in blue carbon – that is, policymakers, practitioners, the private sector, academicians and researchers, as well as civil society – all relevant technical knowledge related to blue carbon monitoring and development.
Photo by Fajrin Hanafi/CIFOR-ICRAF
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: news@cifor-icraf.org and a.sanjaya@cifor-icraf.org