DEFINITELY WATCH IN FULL SCREEN!
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Give yourself a heart attack!
This is a great video from a motor bike rider's POV cruising over some mountain ridges in Colorado!
DEFINITELY WATCH IN FULL SCREEN!
DEFINITELY WATCH IN FULL SCREEN!
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Kids drawings turned into stuffed animals
Cool "Realistic" Disney Characters
I just came across Jirka's blog, and he has an assortment of great designs. But what really caught my eye was these Disney character's.

Esmeralda from The Hunchback of Notre-Dame
Friday, August 26, 2011
The Petty Project
Britt Dietz has been recreating the classic George Petty pin-ups utilizing photographs. You can view the website for the project HERE, as well as check out the Facebook Album and Britt's FB page.
"George Petty was a wonderful Pin-Up artist for Esquire magazine during the late 30s and the 40s. Especially during World War 2, his art was the most famous of the time. Painted on the noses of aircraft during the war by the crews, the 'Petty Girl' became a symbolic reminder for service men of what they were fighting for. I've always been interested in Petty's work, I believe he was the 'classic' pin-up artist and there's not been another like him. The Petty Girl was innocent, teasing, but never full revealing. The classic traits of a true Pin-Up. I came up with an idea last year to 'recreate,' through photos (as close as I could), all of Petty's artwork from the late 1930s to the 1950s. It's a daunting task that will take years to do, but a fun project that I'm very excited for and will including as many different models as I can shoot with till the project is completed."
Petty Project Image #021
Model: Tiffinie Stowers
Slideshow of the whole process: http://petty.momentscapture.com/finished/slideshows/show.php?ID=021-Indian-Tiffinie

Just a sample of Britt's process.

Petty Project Image #107
Model: Kelly Tarbet
Slideshow of the whole process: http://petty.momentscapture.com/finished/slideshows/show.php?ID=107-BlueBikini-Kelly

Petty Project Image #124
Model: Alisha Winter
Slideshow of the whole process: http://petty.momentscapture.com/finished/slideshows/show.php?ID=124-InnerTube-Alisha

The Original George Petty Witch Artwork.

Petty Project Image #010
Model: Kayla Emerson
Probably the longest and most painstaking Petty image I've recreated thus far, and this was the second attempt at it! The final image came out one of the best yet, matching the overall original artwork almost perfectly. I was really happy how the hair came out, which is made from 5 different shots of her hair flying in the wind generated by two opposing wind machines. One of my favorites yet and a lot of fun to shoot!
Britt created a nice little write-up on his process using this photo shoot, to explain in more detail of how he manages to recreate these stunning images.
Labels:
photo,
photomanip,
pin-ups
Thursday, August 25, 2011
World Championship of Sand Sculpting
I just came across some amazing sand sculptures! These are just some of the works of art created at the World Championship. Via
Thursday, June 30, 2011



At first glance these wooden letters appear to be nothing more than a few blocks organized on a table to create a standard alphabet. However the letters are actually illusions of perspective, viewable only from the photographed angle, certain elements stacked high while others layered below are actually far in the background. Designed and photographed by Marc Böttler, see the full alphabet here.
Friday, June 24, 2011
Bleeding Light Sculpture





Via NotCot: Paige Bradley created one of the most striking sculptures I've seen in recent times. Her masterpiece, entitled Expansion, is a beautiful woman seeking inner piece but fractured and bleeding with light
On her website, Paige writes:
Expansion
76 x 35 x 17"
From the moment we are born,
the world tends to have a
container already built for us
to fit inside: A social security
number, a gender, a race,
a profession or an I.Q. I ponder
if we are more defined by the
container we are in, rather than
what we are inside. Would we
recognize ourselves if we could
expand beyond our bodies?
Would we still be able to exist
if we were authentically
'un-contained'?
Paige Bradley
Wednesday, June 15, 2011
Superhero in Everyday Life


Photographer Gregg Segal follows superhero impersonators from the glamor of Hollywood Boulevard to their homes, capturing them still in costume, going about their ordinary household chores. Segal explains his "Super Heroes at Home" project:
I followed the super heroes home to highlight the contrast of the fantastic and mundane. Though in costume, the super heroes are unmasked by the ordinariness of their apartments and their routine chores. While I photographed Batman, a family pulled over to take his picture. He strode up to them with super hero confidence and the children approached him with awe. He was Batman because he was Batman to them. Then late, in his apartment, when he'd taken off his mask and cape and was reheating leftovers in the microwave, he was merely ordinary. I could see what it was that drew him back to Hollywood Boulevard.
Check out his Website for more Great Images http://www.greggsegal.com/
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