Les 50 photos au timing parfait
Il arrive parfois, lorsque vous pressez sur le bouton déclencheur de votre appareil photo, que le résultat du cliché ne soit pas exactement celui auquel vous vous attendiez: au dernier moment, quelqu’un ou quelque chose est apparu dans le champ, donnant à votre prise de vue un caractère inattendu. Dans l’idéal, il faudrait, pour obtenir une photo au timing parfait, que ces trois points soient réunis: l’emplacement parfait ; l’angle parfait ; le moment parfait. C’est justement le classement des cinquante photos au timing le plus parfait trouvées sur internet (ou les plus parfaitement synchronisées, en français), que le site américain Twistedsifter s’est amusé à faire. Chauvinisme oblige, je me permets de vous faire remarquer que la photo numéro 43 a été prise à une centaine de mètres des bureaux de JSBG, en Suisse. En voici le résultat: - Jorge S. UPDATE: Découvrez 50 nouvelles photos au timing parfait –> Cliquez ICI.
The largest photo ever taken of Tokyo is zoomable, and it is glorious:
It took photographer Jeffrey Martin two days of shoot and four months of editing to create the interactive panorama you’re about to experience. At 600,000 pixels wide, it would measure 50 meters by 100 meters if printed at photographic resolution. And yes, it is every bit as awesome as it sounds. Go ahead. Try it. Do you feel like some ridiculously awesome, eagle-eyed super mutant? It’s the idea of creating a view that literally extends our senses far beyond what we can sense on our own. The founder of 360Cities.net, a website where photographers can upload 360-degree images of beatiful locations around the globe, Martin is no stranger to this medium. I use a Canon SLR (in this case, a 7D) and a 400mm lens (in this case a canon L f/5.6 lens) mounted on a Clauss Rodeo on gigapixel robot which is controlled by a tethered laptop to move the camera and fire the shutter while the camera is moving. Also, disk space. (Link)
We declare the world as our canvasHelp us funding Street Art Utopia - The Book
Followers, artists and photographers have for years been asking us if we’re going to print a book. The last two years, our response have been that we will do it when we have 1 million followers on Facebook: We are ready We have close to 4 years of daily charing of street art and contact with artists and photographers. This book has all the potential to become a classic. Time to order your book To do the book as big, thick and colorful as possible we ask for prepaid orders! You can make your order for a book here (shipping included): Thanks! Change of Address: Send us a mail with your new adress from the emailaccount you put your oder from and we will send you the book to your new home. We hope this will be some of the photos we can include in the book: On Facebook. On Facebook. On Facebook. On Facebook. On Facebook. More info. More info. More info. On Facebook. More info. On Facebook. On Facebook. On Facebook. On Facebook. On Facebook. On Facebook. On Facebook. On Facebook. On Facebook.
21st century Gypsies: New Age Travellers adopt horse drawn-caravans and a love of Facebook (as long as it's solar powered)
By Daily Mail Reporter Published: 11:35 GMT, 30 September 2012 | Updated: 10:12 GMT, 1 October 2012 They were the inner-city youth who, fuelled by punk spirit, anarchist philosophy and a hate of Margaret Thatcher, clambered aboard a fleet of battered old vehicles to shun the trappings of the modern world for a life of nomadic freedom. And while today's new-age travellers appears to have taken the philosophy even further, preferring to use traditional horse-drawn caravans instead of gas-guzzling vans, they also appear to be embracing the modern technology like mobile phones, laptops and even Facebook. During the late 1980s and 1990s stories about the travellers were commonplace - illegal raves, clashes with the police, drug busts and fury at the criminal justice act. Photographer Iain McKell took his first pictures of new-age travellers 25 years ago. And while little has been written about the New Age travellers in the past decade, the movement has far from fizzled out.
The 33 Most Beautiful Abandoned Places In The World
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