Posts Tagged ‘kickstarter’

Wet Plate Collodion Photography within Hand Blown Glass

January 8, 2014

Life is so amazing with all kinds of opportunities out there, here is an interesting young artist i found on Creative pro com

Some of the most interesting expressions of creativity can come from the combination of seemingly unrelated art forms. Case in point: a Kickstarter project by San Francisco artist Emma Howell, whose idea is to combine wet plate collodion ambrotypes (think: Matthew Brady Civil War era photography) and glass blowing. Here, the photographic “plates” can actually be bowls. The process and results are unique, beautiful, and just about as far from the throwaway, instant gratification of modern mobile photography as you can get.

Wet plate Collodion Photography within Hand Blown Glass

or to see the history of The Wet Collodion Plate process it self follow the link below.

since her project is fully funded now i am not sure how to be involved other than to keep track of her on the web. maybe one can still contribute to the project helping her along on the creative trail.

that’s all for today back to copying images and backing up files from our Russian trip. ugh or maybe add some images to my web site, haven’t done that in a while. the spiders are wondering jene who?

jene

turn your iphone into an incident light meter, way cool

March 1, 2013

Turn Your iPhone into an Incident Light Meter with Luxi

\http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/jamesflynn/luxi-incident-light-meter-adapter-for-iphone

We’ve seen some apps for iOS in the past that allow your phone to be used as a light meter, and even though some were very skeptical, there were some tests conducted by Ryan E. Walters showing they can work very well (especially considering their cost). What’s the catch though? Well, because of the design, you’re only ever getting a reflective reading, not an incident reading, which actually measures the light falling upon the object you’re shooting. Using the incident reading can usually be faster and give better and more consistent results, so that’s why a new Kickstarter project called Luxi is aiming to turn any iPhone into an incident light meter.


With digital cameras, light meters can be considered somewhat redundant because pretty much every camera gives information on the scene and has tools to help identify the correct exposure (not to mention you can see what you’re doing). Of course, light meters are still useful, and there are plenty of DPs that use them even on digital sets, but if you’re a little short on cash, they can be an expensive proposition. That’s where Luxi comes in, and I think it’s a fantastic idea to turn any iPhone into an incident meter. The other great thing is that the physical product is being designed App agnostic. Here is some more info on that:

Luxi works with any light meter app that can use the front-facing camera and can be calibrated with an offset. We have tested Luxi with many of the light meter apps available for the iPhone.

We’re excited to tell you that we have been working with the developer who created Pocket Light Meter to create a Luxi mode which is specifically designed to be used with Luxi. Stay tuned for updates on this. We may also work with additional app developers in the future to create more exciting ways to use Luxi.

I also think these kinds of light meters are great as backups if you are on a film set and there is no other way to properly judge exposure. I’ve been in situations where batteries have died and I had no other solution (since many light meters don’t take normal batteries), so leaving something like Luxi in your camera bag or in your car means you’ll always have a pretty cheap last resort backup just in case.

As of right now the project has already hit its goal — and actually surpassed it by a great margin with over a month still left — but you can get your hands on a Luxi for only $19 that will work with either the iPhone 5 or the iPhone 4/4S. They are not planning an Android device at this time simply because of the sheer number of Android phones out there that would all have to have their own specifically designed Luxi.

Head on over to the Kickstarter site to read more about it.

Link: Luxi Incident Light Meter adapter for iPhone — Kickstarter

thank you nofilmschool

jene