If you ever thought that Scarlett Johansson looked like Marilyn Monroe or that George Clooney reminded you of Cary Grant or that certain celebrities today make you think of famous people from years past, you’re not crazy. It’s true. Beautiful famous people look like beautiful famous people, no matter the era. And these photographs in George Chamoun’s Iconatomy photo series prove that.
War photographs aren’t grainy or blurry or dark anymore. Now they are so crispy, clean and dramatic that my brain has problems admitting they are real. Or are they? This collection of awesome combat images are a good example of that. They feel like perfect special effects shots taken out of sci-fi movies or video games.
Flickr’s new iOS 7 app now offers automatic uploading at full resolution, with sharing set to privat
Posted in: Today's ChiliFlickr’s new iOS 7 app now offers automatic uploading at full resolution, with sharing set to private by default. Neat.
It’s not too difficult to find the still photographs in this video but some seem to pop up and surprise you when you’d least suspect it. This short little video created by mustardcuffins shows photographs that "skim across the skin of reality". Awesome concept. [mustardcuffins]
Google+ is now rolling out many of the image adjustment tricks included in its Auto Awesome feature
Getty Museum makes 4,600 high-res images free to download with Open Content Program
Posted in: Today's ChiliJournalists and news consumers alike may be familiar with the Getty name — Mark Getty founded his namesake stock photography company in the 1990s, and Getty Images is responsible for distributing thousands of photographs every day. But many Southern Californians best know the family for its contributions to the J. Paul Getty Museum, which houses an enormous collection of art at two locations in Los Angeles. It’s that latter institution that’s making waves today, opening up its digital collection for anyone to view, download, modify and publish, free of charge. The Open Content Program enables access to 4,600 (and counting) high-res images, such as the photograph posted above. The organization’s only requirement is that artwork be accompanied by an attribution line, such as the one published below.
[Digital image courtesy of the Getty’s Open Content Program.]
Filed under: Internet
Via: The Verge
Source: Getty
This might look like your car’s speedometer, but it is in fact a clever visualization of photographs taken during Hurricane Sandy last year.
26 Photos Taken In $20 Lightboxes
Posted in: Today's Chili What kind of photos can you get out of a cardboard box wrapped in some paper? You’d be amazed. For this week’s Shooting Challenge, we asked you to scrap together your own cheap lightbox. The results were fantastic. More »
Every year, Reuters publishes a list of its best photography, and you’ll recognise plenty of the 95 iconic images that capture this year’s biggest news stories. One keen Redditor, though, wanted to know more—so analyzed the EXIF data of all the images to find out how they were captured. More »
Adafruit builds Raspberry Pi-powered light painting rig, takes trippy photos
Posted in: Today's ChiliTaking long exposure photographs at night and painting within them using an iPad may be old hat, but building your own light painting rig? That could earn you some serious geek cred, and according to Adafruit, it isn’t even all that hard. In a new walkthrough, the team fashioned such a contraption using a Raspberry Pi, a python script with under 60 lines of code, some open source software and a handful of electronic components. Not satisfied with the typical light wand, they decided to spice things up with a circular fixture built from PVC pipes and a hula hoop to hold the ribbon of LEDs. After being attached to a bike and paraded around at night, it created the 3D effect in the masterpiece above. If you’re itching to make your own works of art, check out Adafruit’s tutorial at the source link below.
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Adafruit builds Raspberry Pi-powered light painting rig, takes trippy photos originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Aug 2012 03:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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