Posts Tagged ‘miniature’

How Landscape Photos Are Really Made

November 2nd, 2012 by Justina | No Comments | Filed in Design

Earth is beautiful and full of surprises. So is Matthew Albanese, a New York-based artist, creating stunningly realistic landscapes from everyday objects and photographing them as if they were a part of the earth. Albanese named his project “Strange Worlds” for it really is strange to see coral reefs made from walnuts, or mountains built from cinnamon. Being a professional photographer and using various shooting techniques, Matthew is able to alter the appearance of materials and create images that seem perfectly natural.

For those daring to doubt his skills, Albanese has prepared some sneak-peek images of his installations at their early stage, allowing to see the construction process and the difference between the diorama and the final result.

Websites: behance | facebook

1. Tornado

The scene was made of steel wool, cotton, ground parsley and moss.

2. Mountains

This model is made out of faux fur(fields), cotton (clouds) and sifted tile grout (mountains). The perspective is forced like in the rest of the images, and the lighting effect was created by simply shifting the white balance.

3. River horizon

This diorama was made using painted parchment paper, thread, hand dyed ostrich feathers, carved chocolate, wire, raffia, masking tape, coffee, synthetic potting moss and cotton.

4. Aurora Borealis

The effect was created by photographing a beam of colored light against a black curtain to achieve the edge effect. The trees in the picture are so far the only real life element in any of these images. The stars are simply a strobe light, going through holes in cork board.

5. Paradise Island

The scene was made from cotton, salt, cooked sugar, tin foil, feathers & canvas.

6. Mars Landscapes

To get these Mars-like landscapes the artist used paprika, cinnamon, thyme, nutmeg, chili powder and charcoal.

7. Forest Landscape

Diorama is constructed from wood, moss, yellow glitter, clear garbage bags, cooked sugar, scotch-brite pot scrubbers, bottle brushes, clipping from a bush in bloom (white flowers) clear thread, sand, tile grout (coloring), wire, paper and alternating yellow, red and orange party bulbs.

8. Waterfall

This model was made out of glass, plexiglass, tile grout, moss, twigs, salt, painted canvas & dry ice. The waterfall was created from a time exposure of falling table salt.

9. Moon Lanscape

It took two months for the artist to store up enough fireplace ash to create this lunar landscape. The darker rocks are made of mixed tile grout, the flag – crumpled paper & wire. The Earth is a video still projected onto the wall. Inspired by the Apollo 11 mission.

10. Icebergs

These icebergs were made out of 25 pounds of sugar, cooked at varying temperatures (hard crack & pulled sugar recipes). It’s basically made out of candy salt, egg whites, corn syrup, cream of tartar, powdered sugar, blue food coloring, india ink & flour. It took three days to cook, and two weeks to put it all together.

11. Underwater World

The underworld diorama was made out of walnuts, poured and cast candle wax, wire, glitter, peanut shells, flock, plaster, wire, dyed starfish, compressed moss, jellybeans(anemones), sponges, wax coated seashells, toothpaste, clay, figs, feathers, Q-tips, nonpareils. The water surface was created using vinyl shower curtain, plexiglass and clear epoxy. The reflected sunlight effect was made out of a video projector through fake fog. The lens was covered with a piece of blue stretch wrap which created subtle distortions throughout the image. 11 light sources were used in total, including the projector.

12. Volcano

Volcano was constructed out of tile grout, cotton and phosphorous ink. This model was illuminated from within by 6-60 watt light bulbs.

How Landscape Photos Are Really Made originally appeared on Bored Panda on November 2, 2012.


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Bodyscapes by Allan Teger

August 6th, 2012 by Tomas | No Comments | Filed in Design

We’ve already shared some amazing Examples of Landscape Photography few months ago, but we missed one talented landscape photographer – Allan Teger. On the other hand, he is not like any other landscape photographer..

Self-taught American photographer Allan Teger turns the naked female and male bodies into ski slopes, fishing holes, golf courses and places where motorcycles, horses, rowboats, sailboats, biplanes, and mountain climbers play.

They are NOT double exposures. Nor are they the result of computer montage. These unique landscapes are created by photographing toys and miniature “people” directly on the human body.

“Bodyscapes®” were Allan I. Teger’s first artistic series that began in 1976 and new images are still being added. Here are some of his most popular works with a couple of new images he has just sent to designboom.

Website: bodyscapes.com

Bikes

Fishing

Train

Ski Lift

Shark

Lovers

Diver

Golfing the Rough

Sailboat Couple

Sailing

Tubes

Two Riders

Dolphins

High Wire

Fore

High Wire

Bodyscapes by Allan Teger originally appeared on Bored Panda on August 6, 2012.


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Incredible Pencil Tip Sculptures by Diem Chau

July 27th, 2012 by Tomas | No Comments | Filed in Design

When I saw these tiny carvings, I thought that Dalton Ghetti has added some new works to his incredible series of pencil tip sculptures. However, it turns out that these wonderful micro sculptures were actually carved by Vietnamese-American artist Diem Chau.

The sculpture of an elephant was made after Diem saw the photos of Jimmy John Liautaud, founder of Jimmy John’s, killing endangered animals on safari in Africa. “I was enraged and disgusted,” says Diem on her blog. “I wanted to make something beautiful and sad.  I feel his loneliness.”

The second piece called “The Raven & The Sun” is based on the Native American myth of how the Raven stole the Sun and gave light to the world.

Diem’s carvings are so well executed that it makes me sad that there are only two of them. Now I’m bookmarking her blog and will continue to refresh it everyday till I see more amazing pencil tip sculptures!

Website: diemchau.com | Blog: tinyhaus.blogspot.com | Via: thisiscolossal

Raven & The Sun

“This piece is based on the Native American myth of how the Raven stole the Sun and gave light to the world.”

The Last Elephant

This piece was made after Diem saw the photos of Jimmy John Liautaud, founder of Jimmy John’s, killing endangered animals on safari in Africa. “I was enraged and disgusted,” says Diem on her blog. “I wanted to make something beautiful and sad.  I feel his loneliness.”

For more pencil tip sculptures, be sure to check out the work of Dalton Ghetti.

Incredible Pencil Tip Sculptures by Diem Chau originally appeared on Bored Panda on July 27, 2012.


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Minimiam: Little People in the World of Food

August 29th, 2011 by Bored Panda | No Comments | Filed in Design

Do you remember the little people from the Tiny Street Art Project by Slinkachu? Now take these tiny guys to the beautiful Foodscapes by Carl Warner and you’ll get something similar to what you’re about to see.

Minimiam (meaning “Mini Yum”) is a creative union of husband and wife who create tiny worlds of food with their little people doing their little chores here. Akiko Ida is Japanese and Pierre Javelle is French. They met studying photography at the Paris “Arts Decoratifs” art school.

Since childhood, Akiko has always been attracted to the world of gastronomy. As a child, she elaborated and baked different sorts of bread which she subsequently photographed and classified in a notebook. At the same time, she invented tiny characters that filled entire pages of her journal. Akiko became a renowned Food Photographer, and has already taken part in more than 30 cookbooks.

Piere hails from Burgundy. He grew up on a comics diet. Attracted by drawing, illustrations and photography, art school was his refuge. The likes of Doisneau and Cartier-Bresson were major influences in his choice of photography as a medium.

Website: minimiam.com

Minimiam: Little People in the World of Food originally appeared on Bored Panda on August 29, 2011.

Possibly related articles:

  1. Little People – a Tiny Street Art Project
  2. 12 Tasty National Flags Made out of Food
  3. Real World In Miniature: 20 Tilt Shift Photos


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Miniature Buildings: Street Art by EVOL

May 23rd, 2011 by Bored Panda | No Comments | Filed in Design

German street artist EVOL transforms banal urban surfaces into miniature lifelike buildings. He is like an urban planner, but unlike the others, he creates a city within the city.

The artist uses complicated stencils to quickly transform powerboxes, and other worn urban surfaces into miniature apartment buildings or other structures. By drawing tiny balconies and satellite dishes onto the side of an electrical box, he is able to turn it into a realistic tiny skyscraper.

EVOL’s works are so precise that, when you’re glancing at photographs, it sometimes might be hard to tell that you’re not looking at pictures of real buildings.

The artist creates miniature buildings within different cities and has even been commissioned to do installations in galleries, and while the police might not agree with this street art project, they probably enjoy the end result.

Websites: evoltaste.com | flickr

Miniature Buildings: Street Art by EVOL originally appeared on Bored Panda on May 23, 2011.

Possibly related articles:

  1. 15 Creative Street Art Ideas from OakoAk
  2. Creative Street Art Ideas By Robin Rhode
  3. Portraits Carved in Walls by Alexandre Farto


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Real World In Miniature: 20 Tilt Shift Photos

August 19th, 2010 by Bored Panda | No Comments | Filed in Design

The photos you are about to see are not miniature toys or models. It’s a real world in Tilt Shift photography!

It can be achieved in two ways: 1) optically or 2) digitally with some photo manipulation.

First method involves taking photos with a special tilt shift lens which allows you to control the plane of focus. These lenses are usually used for simulating a miniature scene.

However, if you want to do it cheap way – there’s always the second method – where all you have to do is defocus certain areas of the photo.  Although these basic digital post-processing techniques can give you results similar to those achieved with tilt – the term should be used only when the effect is produced optically. The digital result is often called “fake tilt shift”.

If you are interested in transforming the real world into a miniature in a cheap way, there are lots of simple Photoshop tutorials, you can start: here and here. If you happen to be a rich bastard then buy some tilt shift lenses as Real Tilt-Shift photography requires, not surprisingly, a Tilt-Shift Lens.

Here are 20 beautiful examples of real world turned into a miniature. Can you tell the fakes from the real ones?

Bamboos for GrinGod

Bamboos for bunchofpants

Bamboos for  Michael.Sutton

Bamboos for Zevotron

Bamboos for mr.beaver

Bamboos for mre1965

Bamboos for EasyTiger3

Bamboos for Express Monorail

Bamboos for andreakw

Bamboos for Swiss Bones

Bamboos for pattagon

Bamboos for Rutger de Moddertukker

Bamboos for gTarded

Bamboos for neilalderney123

Bamboos for Jeff Cushner

Bamboos for EmBe79

Bamboos for Suviko

Bamboos for  lordshrike

Bamboos for [MART!N]

Bamboos for dutchb0y

Real World In Miniature: 20 Tilt Shift Photos originally appeared on Bored Panda on August 19, 2010.

Possibly related posts:

  1. 40 Breathtaking Bird Photos By John & Fish
  2. The Most Beautiful Spider in the World (20 pics)
  3. 25 Incredible Photos Made Without Photoshop


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  • About us

    It was in the back corner of McDonalds with a couple of hours to wait for a train home to Norwich, that theDot first came together. Freshly inspired by a weekend at the 4designers conference in London and having traipsed around museums and exhibitions all day, three minds came together over chicken burgers and chips.

    The three are currently studying Graphic Communication at Norwich University College of the Arts, where they delve into advertising, corporate branding, design for publishing, photography, illustration and so on. All confident in their skills, but continuing on their learning journey.

    We are a new design group hoping to achieve great things

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