Dat VIDEO!
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Kurume Kasuri
200 years ago during the Edo period a 12 year old girl named Den Inoue noticed a white dot on her kimono fabric. Unravelling the threads to get a better look she realized that two of the crossing threads were not dyed, creating a white spot. After much experimenting she discovered that wrapping threads before dying them was a new way of making patterned fabric. This traditional Japanese technique, which spread all over the continent, all began with her small observation. Today there are still a number of fabric weavers continuing the traditional handmade process of Kurume Kasuri.…
Perhaps I mentioned that before..
IH bandana @Giles -
And @van Olzon design a print like this vid:
Or better something @Sarina likes!!
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Kurume Kasuri
200 years ago during the Edo period a 12 year old girl named Den Inoue noticed a white dot on her kimono fabric. Unravelling the threads to get a better look she realized that two of the crossing threads were not dyed, creating a white spot. After much experimenting she discovered that wrapping threads before dying them was a new way of making patterned fabric. This traditional Japanese technique, which spread all over the continent, all began with her small observation. Today there are still a number of fabric weavers continuing the traditional handmade process of Kurume Kasuri.Beautiful stuff…
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Might have to forgive some of the cheesy music but a lot of the clips are pretty incredible.
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I like the work of visual artist Martin Heck!
http://www.timestormfilms.com/ -
@Giles there's a list of equipment on the Vimeo page for the timelapse:
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Canon EOS 6D
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Canon EOS 550D
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24-105mm f4L
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70-200 f4L,
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15-85mm f3.5-5.6
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Samyang 14mm f2.8
The last two are motion control rigs, so the photographer will have programmed them to move slightly, take a shot, move again, and then repeat. After that it's just a case of assembling the video from stills.
My guess would be that your camera set-up is better than the above. Don't you have an enormous Nikon? You just need the robots to do the grunt work.
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Like the last scene most.
Life, like a dome of many-coloured glass,
Stains the white radiance of Eternity,
Until Death tramples it to fragments. — Die,
If thou wouldst be with that which thou dost seek!
Follow where all is fled! -
That starts at 10:00
So many more lovely scenes in there.
Always shaken at 3:00
Thanks @organisys -
Start at 3:30 and watch the "Bruce Lee style" scene.
But then you have missed the beginning of 37 min.
This guys open a new narrative dimension.
"Take an exclusive look at the process behind Coral Morphologic's living artworks, colorful reefs created using coral polyps native to Miami. Watch as the scientific art collective explores the visual storytelling potential of coral reef organisms through film, multimedia and site-specific artworks."