1 Trillion Frames-per-Second Photos Capture Light in Motion

[ By WebUrbanist in Conceptual & Futuristic & Technology. ]

Nothing moves faster than light, right? True as that may be in theory, a team at MIT has developed a method for visualizing its propagation to amazing effect in practice.

Slowed down and turned into film format, an illuminated tomato goes from ordinary to uncanny as a snaking arc of white light approaches in a billionth-of-a-second burst, then deforms to move across it, with an unrivaled FPS rate.

And the impact goes beyond making neat little films: “Beyond the potential in artistic and educational visualization, applications include industrial imaging to analyze faults and material properties, scientific imaging for understanding ultrafast processes and medical imaging to reconstruct sub-surface elements.”

So how does it work? Per their abstract: “The effective exposure time of each frame is two trillionths of a second and the resultant visualization depicts the movement of light at roughly half a trillion frames per second. Direct recording of reflected or scattered light at such a frame rate with sufficient brightness is nearly impossible. We use an indirect ‘stroboscopic’ method that records millions of repeated measurements by careful scanning in time and viewpoints. Then we rearrange the data to create a ‘movie’ of a nanosecond long event.”


Want More? Click for Great Related Content on WebUrbanist:

Painting with Light: 15 Long-Exposure Light Art Photos

Luminous graffiti, eerie drawings, streaks of light, raining sparks - all of these effects and more are possible by moving a light source around in a scene. 4 Comments - Click Here to Read More »»


WU Exclusive Light Graffiti Interview with MRI

With tons of energy, some fresh ideas and a willingness to play around and be goofy, the photography duo MRI creates graceful portraits of light in motion. 12 Comments - Click Here to Read More »»


12 Motion-Blur and Time-Lapse Photographers

Most photographs only freeze a moment in time. Long exposures can create an image that encompasses several moments; time lapse photography can even span years. 18 Comments - Click Here to Read More »»


Share on Facebook

[ By WebUrbanist in Conceptual & Futuristic & Technology. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


Sony World Photography Award Winners 2012

mitch dobrowner 4 Sony World Photography Award Winners 2012

Sony’s World Photography award winners for 2012 have been announced and in addition to the awards, there is an exhibition showcasing photos from the winners at Somerset House in London. The exhibit runs until May 22 of this year. The winner of the top prize was American photographer Mitch Dobrowner who wowed judges with his series of stormy landscape photos.

Check out some of the photos after the jump.

(...)
Read the rest of Sony World Photography Award Winners 2012


© 2012 Highsnobiety for Titel Media. Author: nickestrada | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us | %%sharethis_link%%
Post tags: , ,


FUCT “Divided We Stand, United We Fall” Lookbook

FUCT Divided We Stand United We Fall 01 FUCT Divided We Stand, United We Fall Lookbook

FUCT come strong as usual as they have released both archival photos mixed with photos featuring their current collection that’s modelled on various street characters, in this collection dubbed “Divided We Stand, United We Fall”. The images show that the brand’s stood the test of time and is still indeed relevant today. Photography duties were taken on board by both Mikal Howard and Adam Rossiter.

See all the images of FUCT’s “Divided We Stand, United We Fall” after the jump.

(...)
Read the rest of FUCT “Divided We Stand, United We Fall” Lookbook


© 2012 Highsnobiety for Titel Media. Author: dyong | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us | %%sharethis_link%%
Post tags: , ,


Elroy Shoots: Tutu

tutu08 Elroy Shoots: Tutu

This week we are starting a new original photo series with French, Berlin based, photographer Damien Elroy Vignaux. We start the series with a nice photo spread, featuring model Tutu.

Photography: Damien Elroy Vignaux

Check out the full series after the jump.

(...)
Read the rest of Elroy Shoots: Tutu


© 2012 Highsnobiety for Titel Media. Author: David Fischer | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us | %%sharethis_link%%
Post tags: , ,


The Brooklyn Circus: The Beautiful Struggle by Josh Farria

The Brooklyn Circus: The Beautiful Struggle by Josh Farria

A move that is rather unconventional for a traditionally menswear-centric brand, The Brooklyn Circus introduce its “The Beautiful Struggle” pictorial. Photographed by Josh Farria, the vintage-themed images aim to highlight the important role that women play within both the BKc brand identity as well as society as a whole. Paying homage to the women to whom many of the label’s founders and designers have received support from through the years, the images effectively convey a sense of style, personality, nostalgia and independence all in one. This particular “The Beautiful Struggle” photoshoot is an inaugural platform that The Brooklyn Circus aims to unravel into a bigger forthcoming project down the line.

Photography: Josh Farria

Click here to view full gallery at Hypebeast.com

Trashcam Project: Dumpsters Turned into Pinhole Cameras

[ By Steph in Urban & Street Art & Urban Images. ]

The images are breathtaking: black-and-white urban scenes with all the organic drama and character that only low-tech photography methods can produce. Would you believe that these beautiful photos were taken from inside the grimiest, least glamorous objects that lurk in alleys and on street corners? The ‘Trashcam Project’ transforms dumpsters into traveling pinhole cameras that roll around the city of Hamburg.


Photographers Christoph Blaschke, Mirko Derpmann, Scholz & Friends Berlin and Matthias Hewing teamed up with the Hamburg sanitation department to alter ordinary dumpsters. Drilling tiny holes into the containers, they taped Ilford photo paper to the back wall of the interior. The length of the exposure is calculated based on the strength of the sun or other ambient lighting present in the scene.

The Trashcam Project has produced a rather haunting series of photographs of the city of Hamburg. The images have the typical vignetting, slight light leaks and other imperfections that often come with this photography technique. The single small hole drilled into the dumpster projects an inverted image of the scene outside on the opposite side of the container. The smaller the hole, the sharper the image produced.

As opposed to high-tech photographic innovations, pinhole photography is all about simplicity and unpredictable results. Among the first forms of photography to emerge in the 19th century, it’s based on a concept that has been around since the 5th century BCE. The first lens was added around 1600 CE, and it wasn’t until 1850 when pinhole devices were first used to take photos rather than simply displaying an inverted image inside a box or a room.

See the whole series at the Trashcam Project’s Flickr.


Want More? Click for Great Related Content on WebUrbanist:

Trippy Graffiti Project Pairs Street Art and Photography

What would you think if the city started photographing you? No, not with CCTV, but with graffiti. This fun project appears to do just that. 14 Comments - Click Here to Read More »»


RedBall Project Takes Interactive Urban Art on Tour

A huge inflatable red ball travels around the world, showing up in cities like Toronto and Abu Dhabi, squeezed into entryways and hovering above the street. 3 Comments - Click Here to Read More »»


Holgas, Polaroids & Pinholes: Lush Low-Tech Photography

Film photography is a dying art, but should we so fast to let go of the amazing images created with low-tech cameras like Holgas, pinhole cameras and Polaroids? 6 Comments - Click Here to Read More »»


Share on Facebook

[ By Steph in Urban & Street Art & Urban Images. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


Hedi Slimane’s Diary: Dustin Hoffman

Hedi Slimane’s Diary: Dustin Hoffman

Yves Saint-Laurent creative director and photographer Hedi Slimane has made waves with his starkly contrasting black and white photography. This latest collection of striking portraits of iconic film actor Dustin Hoffman continue to do his work justice. Each intimate shot captures Hoffman and his many years of on-camera experience in a manner that is both inspiring, and deeply reflective. You can see more of Slimane’s work here.

Click here to view full gallery at Hypebeast.com

Oh, Snap! 10 Camera Concepts Focused on Innovation

[ By Delana in Architecture & Design & Gadgets & Geek Art & Technology & Futurism. ]

Despite having been around for a very long time, photography seems to be constantly evolving. Along with digital photography came a whole new generation of incredibly inventive gadgets and concepts, all designed to help us capture the memorable moments in life. Whether your interest is sharing those memories or just hanging onto them forever to look at once in a while, these 10 brilliant cameras are all perfect for capturing memorable moments.

Candid shots can be a mixed bag. Some are adorable and fun, but some are so unflattering as to be truly horrifying. This concept camera designed by Xi Zhu would put final editing power in the hands of the people in the snapshots. There are two pieces to the camera: a lens which stays with the photographer and a preview screen that is handed off to those being photographed. As soon as a picture is taken it pops up on the screen and the subjects in the photo have to choose between deleting or saving it. Terrible pictures never see the light of day, and no one is embarrassed by the shots from last night’s party.

Would you be likely to smile or grimace if you saw a slingshot being aimed at your face? That surprised look is just what the designer behind the Sling Shot Camera was looking for. The silly camera looks a lot like the weapon/toy, but instead of loading it up with a rock and causing trouble you twing the string to activate the shutter. That tiny lens takes a picture of your friends ducking, running for cover or simply looking amazed that you would aim a toy weapon at their faces.

Taking panoramic pictures is not an easy task unless you have specialized equipment. And a full spherical panorama? That’s like the elusive white whale of photography. The Throwable Panoramic Ball Camera could put an end to the difficult nature of panoramas and let everyone join the fun. The camera is shaped like a ball and contains 36 cameras all around its surface. To capture a stunning panorama, you just throw the ball into the air. Special software stitches all of the images together to create one truly stunning photo.

Film cameras have a certain charm, but digital is so much more convenient. This concept, appropriately named Digital Film, would let photographers use old film cameras as digital ones. The device fits onto the back of the camera, just where the film and hinged cover would go. It acts as a USB storage device for the pictures until the photographer is ready to unload the photos. Although it is just a concept, the brilliant little gadget would no doubt find a home with plenty of shutterbugs who dig the old way of taking pictures.

Maybe the most creative camera is the one that isn’t there at all. Air Clicker is a concept camera which uses gestures and tiny finger-mounted devices to take pictures or videos. Making an “L” shape with the fingers and then twitching the forefinger as if clicking a shutter button activates the unusual camera. The pictures are transmitted via Bluetooth to a synced mobile phone, making for a seamless way to photograph memorable moments without always holding a camera or a phone in front of your face.

Vacation photos are always fun, but beach shots seem to be the ones we go back to again and again – especially when the weather turns nasty and we need a sunny reminder of warm days. The UnderAbove concept camera takes photos underwater and above water at the same moment, giving a dual glimpse of your fun beach time. Looking like a fishing bobber, the UnderAbove floats with one camera on the bottom and one on the top. A manual shutter button takes pictures on command, or a timer lets you take group shots with everyone in them. The concept even includes a waterproof screen for instant review of your pics.

Since digital cameras eliminated the processing cost of photos, plenty of people seem to have cameras or phone permanently attached to their faces, snapping away. The Meme camera takes the idea of nonstop documentation to its natural next step with a small, constantly-shooting camera worn around the neck. It has an autocapture mode to constantly take pictures documenting everything you do. A syncronized smartphone receives all of the photos which can later be edited and shared.

We all have at least one of those friends or relatives who, after taking tons of pictures at a gathering, promises to email copies of the photos to everyone…and then never does. The smart little UCIM Camera would let three people share the very same snapshots with no keeping of promises required. The camera holds three USB sticks; whenever a photo is taken it is recorded on all three memory devices. One for you and one for two other people – it’s the perfect way to share!

Although it is hard to imagine a scenario in which anyone would want to stalk photography subjects with a gun-shaped camera instead of a regular one, the inventors of the Kill Shot believe that hunters could be its big market. The camera was invented when two brothers spotted a handsome deer after the end of hunting season. Not wanting to break the law, they put an iPhone up to their gun’s scope to zoom in on the magnificent creature and snap a picture of it. From there the idea grew into a Kickstarter project.

Would all of the hipsters in the house please raise your hands? iPhone photography has been elevated to the heights of an entirely new art form, primarily thanks to apps like Instagram that make even off-the-cuff photos look good. But people who miss the tactile sensation of pushing a button to take photos might love the Gizmon iCa. It is more or less an iPhone case that makes your phone look and function like a cool vintage camera. And unlike the other fine ideas listed here, this one is actually available to buy.


Want More? Click for Great Related Content on WebUrbanist:

9 Creatively Camera-Free Photographers [30 Photos]

Some of the most amazing photography doesn't use a camera at all. These incredible images were produced using ancient methods - no lenses required. 34 Comments - Click Here to Read More »»


Holgas, Polaroids & Pinholes: Lush Low-Tech Photography

Film photography is a dying art, but should we so fast to let go of the amazing images created with low-tech cameras like Holgas, pinhole cameras and Polaroids? 4 Comments - Click Here to Read More »»


Lifebook: Single Device that Combines Every Gadget

Tired of keeping track of all of your little gadgets? This concept would let them all come together into one super-functional super-device. 4 Comments - Click Here to Read More »»


Share on Facebook

[ By Delana in Architecture & Design & Gadgets & Geek Art & Technology & Futurism. ]

[ WebUrbanist | Archives | Galleries | Privacy | TOS ]


Video: BERG – Swiping through cinema, Touching through glass

berg photography Video: BERG   Swiping through cinema, Touching through glass

Today we come across an impressive product photography concept by BERG. We report all day about products releasing around the globe and sometimes it is still hard for us to imagine how people shop so much online these days, especially when it comes to more pricey items. Even though we have come very far, and top online retailers make sure to give the best images and videos (in some cases) possible in order for you to properly check out a product, it is far from perfect we would say.

BERG has come up with an interesting concept, shown in the video here below. Images extracted from HD videos of the products, while playing with both angles and focus, result in a pretty incredible experience we would say. Before we are getting too technical here, check out the video here below.

A further explanation of what BERG exactly did follows here. We cannot wait for such a shopping experience on the iPad in the future.


© 2012 Highsnobiety for Titel Media. Author: David Fischer | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us | %%sharethis_link%%
Post tags: , , ,


The Badoo Project New York Video

The Badoo Project New York Video

To celebrate the launch of Badoo, a brand new social network meant to allow users to meet new people, fashion photographers Danielle Levitt, Kenneth Capello, Brooke Nipar and Dan Mortensen captured 1,000 portraits of stylish New Yorkers for “The Badoo Project”. Taking place over the course of three days, the shoot’s top 24 portraits will be used on the network’s billboards, banners and media across the city at the end of April. Head on over to Badoo.com to learn more.

Read more at Hypebeast.com