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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)LE
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1 yr. ago
  • Hungary itself is leaning quite heavily into an authoritarian vibe these days. If one were to go this route, I’d recommend taking advantage of your new EU-citizen status and find permanent residence in a country with stronger democratic traditions.

  • I don’t know where you are, but here in Norway, people tend to get paid when their work is used for commercial or entertainment purposes.

    Of course, very few can live off of royalties alone, but a lot of artists get a considerable amount income from their previous works.

    (Edited in total, I matched the anger I felt from what I was answering to, and decided to moderate)

  • His movies doesn’t suck. He’s an excellent technician and movie-mechanic, but his apparent inability to portray humans and their connections in a believable manner puts him in the overrated-book for me.

  • Haven’t seen Philosophy Tube on here yet.

    High quality and engaging deep dives on various philosophy-related topics. Abigail, the face of the channel is an actor and playwright (and an academic) and that very much shines through.

  • Swirl

  • A little more context:

    The exposure time for each line is a maximum of 30 ms. That number comes from dividing the amount of lines over the time a scan takes. Factoring in overhead from read-time and actually incrementing the sensor, I guess the sensor is open for maybe 15-20 ms.

    As I said above, flickering sources are an issue. They manifest as periodic lines of darker and brighter streaks, kind of like venetian blinds. The LED sources I sometimes use are meant for film, so they’re either continuous, or on fast enough duty cycles so it doesn’t really matter, fluorescent sources powered from mains are from my experience most likely to mess things up.

  • Photography @lemmy.world
    Leavingoldhabits @lemmy.world

    Swirl

    It’s been a while, here’s an experiment with the scanner and perpendicular rotation, the model is rotating on an office chair, very slowly, and the scan is from top to bottom over 2-ish minutes.

    Permanently Deleted

  • If you like jazz piano, Keith Jarret’s köln concert is a masterpiece.

    There were a bunch of issues with the venue and he ended up playing the whole thing on a broken piano.

    This video sums up how the peice happened.

    And this is recording

    Edit: I like to think it’s a story of stacked disasters and a master artist somehow making the whole mess gorgeous.

  • Permanently Deleted

  • Stream of consciousness from train of thought and dance of eternity from meteropolis pt. 2 are really good, long-ish instrumentals that kind of tell a story.

    And to answer OP: Metropolis pt.2 by dream theater is a great concept album that has an interesting story to follow.

  • Asklemmy @lemmy.ml
    Leavingoldhabits @lemmy.world

    Anyone know how to filter my online experience?

    The last time Trump won, there was this constant barrage of scandals and frankly horrifying news permeating my online experience. And while I admit that from my European perspective, there was some entertainment in the whole thing, the experience was more exhausting than anything else.

    I like to keep up with the news, but I also like my mental health. Are there any effective strategies for keeping the amount of trump-spam I’m exposed to at an absolute minimum, while also keeping up with whatever else is going on in the world?

    Photography @lemmy.world
    Leavingoldhabits @lemmy.world

    Another one from the scanner, this is 'vær'.

    A study in what a pair of hands can do in a shot. Hands are a big part of a shot I’m planning, and every bit of research into how you can play with the motion helps.

    Scanned top to bottom over about two minutes, open lens, two well placed tube lights to get the drama going.

    Photography @lemmy.world
    Leavingoldhabits @lemmy.world

    Another one from the scannercam, this is 'Beskuespill'.

    This is a fairly old one, from a few months after the camera was built. An artist friend asked me to document one of his rooms, he was into installation and sculpture at the time. I agreed on the condition that I had complete freedom in how the documentation was done.

    This was the second time working with this model, and she is one of the very few models I’ve worked with for whom the time shift effect has properly ‘clicked’. No direction required, just time and play. The blanket-waterfall stuck.

    Scanned top to bottom in about two minutes.

    Photography @lemmy.world
    Leavingoldhabits @lemmy.world

    I turned a scanner into a camera, this is 'Nyquist'

    The nyquist sampling theorem is a cornerstone of analog to digital conversion. It posits that to adequately preserve an analog signal when converting to digital, you have to use a sampling frequency twice as fast as what a human can sense. This is part of why 44.1 khz is considered high quality audio, even though the mic capturing the audio vibrates faster, sampling it at about 40k times a second produces a signal that to us is indistinguishable from one with an infinite resolution. As the bandwidth our hearing, at best peaks at about 20khz.

    I’m no engineer, just a partially informed enthusiast. However, this picture of the water moving, somehow illustrates the nyquist theorem to me. How perception of speed varies with distance, and how distance somehow make things look clear. The scanner blade samples at about 30hz across the horizon.

    Scanned left to righ, in about 20 seconds. The view from a floating pier across an undramatic patch of the Oslo fjord.

    *edit: I swapped the direction

    pics @lemmy.world
    Leavingoldhabits @lemmy.world

    I modded a scanner to be a camera, this is 'Waterdance'

    cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/17697235

    One of the results of a collaboration with a dancer. Once the motion-aspect of scanning photography clicked with her, it was a blast playing around for a few hours. This is a quick scan, left to right in about 20 seconds.

    Photography @lemmy.world
    Leavingoldhabits @lemmy.world

    I modded a scanner to be a camera, this is 'Waterdance'

    One of the results of a collaboration with a dancer. Once the motion-aspect of scanning photography clicked with her, it was a blast playing around for a few hours. This is a quick scan, left to right in about 20 seconds.

    Photography @lemmy.world
    Leavingoldhabits @lemmy.world

    I modded a scanner to into a camera, this is 'Eik'

    The last shot I posted gained some traction, so I felt like sharing some more of what I’ve done with my scanner camera. The scan is done from top to bottom in about 2 minutes, the model did a great job of staying still throughout.

    While scanning motion is definitely eye-catching and spectacular, there are other qualities to appreciate. The gorgeous soft, yet tack sharp aesthetic of large format photography is easily available with a scanner.

    Usually I fight the IR-super sensitivity of the sensor, but this time it made her skin iridescent against the rock in the background.

    Photography @lemmy.world
    Leavingoldhabits @lemmy.world

    I modded a scanner into a camera. This is ‘drake V’

    Taken on a small group of Islands in the Oslo fjord, called Hvasser. A 15 meter peice of fabric playing in the wind, scanned right to left in 21 seconds. Got really lucky with the clouds this time, allowing a single beam of sunlight in as a highlight.