Archive for the ‘photography’ Category

The (Digital) Polaroid Experience

To describe the fun of using Poladroid really just pales compared to experiencing it. This little bitty app closely replicates the experience of using a Polaroid camera. Not only does it take any picture you drop onto its funky camera icon and convert it into a Polaroid-like photo with faded colors and that classic white border. It also actually makes you wait for the photo to “develop”.

As you sit there staring at the little mini picture slowly come into focus through the brown developer you can actually use your mouse to grab and drag the images so as to “shake” it. When my roommate asked me if the shaking makes the photo develop faster; I replied “I don’t know! Just like a real Polaroid!”

This is a must see random app.

(via hrrrthrrr)

Posted by nate on October 23rd, 2008 No Comments

Dentyne Smile Accepted

Being in a somewhat captive audience on the subway it’s hard not to soak in the visual stimuli provided by advertising on the train. In between the blur of Budweiser and city services ads every so often an ad or a campaign stands out. A more recent series that has burned an image in the back of my brain is an entry from Dentyne to promote their gum. The ads play with the concept that internet technology and culture have wedged themselves in-between actual human contact. The ads use naturalistic photography juxtaposed with plain text representations of common internet phrases and communique. The implicit meaning is that these locutions are insufficient compared to their real-life counterparts and that one should reject the distance created by technology. The warmth of actual intimacy — while chewing gum — is apparently preferable to the sterile distance of online communication. I like the ads. Whenever I board the train and see one I find myself staring for lengthy periods of time but I also feel that I have a completely opposite reaction than the ads direct meaning.

One of the greatest tools several thousands dollars of debt and a film degree have given me is the ability to perform and obsession with imagery analysis. I like the idea that pictures carry a visual vocabulary of meaning. The Dentyne ads to me carry an emotional weight in that their imagery communicates feelings like love, friendship, communion, humanity. They are beautifully shot and really have a sort of aesthetics of the real kind of feel to them. For a while, the reason behind my fascination eluded me, I liked the images but felt off-put by the message. To me the internet is not a de-facto distancing technology, but quite the opposite. It can be used to extend and facilitate real human interaction. It is useful in its supplemental function as a way to find people who might otherwise slip through the cracks and its ability to communicate information like performances, parties, gatherings en masse. When used properly in fact the internet can be the means to an end for real-life human intimacy. It finally hit me when I saw the above image “Friend Request Accepted” and I realized what it was about the ad campaign that stood out.

For me, far from criticizing or commenting on the distance between what these words mean and the representative picture of the women hugging I think the emotional connection I associate with the image and the meaning of the words is one and the same. In a way “Friend Request Accepted” is a sort of virtual hug between two people. What’s bizarre for me is the way in which I realized I had associated emotional significance to such phrases in the same way I attributed the same feeling to imagery. In a way the sterile, unassuming phrases we are accustomed to seeing online become a snap-shot of an emotion that is both visceral and in a way hyperreal.

After all, how often are we conscious of the moments we become friends? I can name many people I would consider close friends but I can’t name the specific point at which that became the case for each relationship. I can think of instances, moments when that connection manifested and I became aware of the reality of our friendship. But, as with many people my day to day interactions are not so much a catalog of those moments of clarity but instead a deluge of taking life for granted. That is what really hits me about this campaign. The isolated clips provide a window into an untapped level of awareness. Whether they be generic computer phrases or beautiful photographs.

Posted by nate on October 18th, 2008 4 Comments

Nate + Carousel

Posted by nate on October 12th, 2008 3 Comments

Canon Powershot G10

Crave…

Posted by nate on September 26th, 2008 No Comments

Child Commodity

Found this photo series by JeongMee Yoon incredibly disturbing. It makes me wonder — if I had children how much I would invest in their frivolousness. It also makes me chillingly aware of the insane amount of products I must have owned as a child. I’m sure it would have nearly matched these photos. What an insane culture we live in.

(via pop-pervert)

Posted by nate on September 21st, 2008 2 Comments

Tumbled Picnic Picture in Delores Park

Was browsing through my archives since the website update and ended up on a random tumblr. Something about seeing a picture of a picnic in Delores Park (San Francisco) at the bottom of a tumblog really just smacks of home to me.

Posted by nate on September 9th, 2008 No Comments

Phillip Toledano - Days with My Father

Phillip Toledano - Days with My Father [link]

A real novel approach to gallery navigation.

Posted by nate on July 24th, 2008 No Comments

Cherry Blossom FestivalBrooklyn Botanical Garden

Finally made it to the Cherry Blossom Festival at the Brooklyn Botanical Garden. It was like a festival as to be expected, food, music, tents but I was sort of surprised at how wondrous it felt. I floated from area to area running into kimono-clad Brooklynites and Japanophiles. Everyone was taking photos much to my bemusement as I had come for the purpose of photography. Everything was fair game.

The grass was lush and wet and the cherry blossoms hung right in our faces so that it felt like we were in the clouds. The air was dewey and overcast but it never rained. On the Cherry walk, a canopied walkway dripping with blossoms inches above our heads kids ran around and jumped up into the tree branches. When they dropped it was graceful like a dangling leaf that at long last unshackled itself in the fall’s breeze. Spring has not come soon enough. photos

Posted by nate on May 3rd, 2008 No Comments

x=blog+stay+informed » Blog Archive » +WORDPRESS TO IMPRESS

“Any photographer with a website should also have a blog. If you don’t, it’s like playing the PGA Tour without a putter - no serious competitor would ever do so.” [link]

I quite enjoy this analogy. I’m no (professional) photographer But I agree with the sentiment. In fact I would stretch this to include every creative professional or really just everybody should have a blog.

Posted by nate on May 2nd, 2008 No Comments

CreativSpace image search - finally a cool image search

[link] A kind of coverflow style image search. Type in a term and see the images arranged above. Flip through them.

Posted by nate on April 22nd, 2008 No Comments