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Monthly Archives: November 2013

Red Tower Sliced

Red Tower Sliced

Tide

Tide

Tromso Kilpis Out Sliced

Tromso Kilpis Out Sliced

Three wonderful photographs by Brian and Gareth McClave. The McClave brothers are the directors of Site-Eye who specialise in time-lapse and stereoscopic time-lapse film and photography. You can see some examples of their work on the Natural History Museum site:

http://www.nhm.ac.uk/nature-online/collections-at-the-museum/making-part-collection/beetles-preparing-skeleton/index.html

(beetles cleaning the skeleton of a parrot)

and more generally on their website

http://www.site-eye.co.uk

where you will find lots of buildings that emerge with unseemly haste – an orgy of time lapse pleasure. Much of their work is for the construction industry. Their 3D time lapse films are even more stunning.

The photographs are part of a research project where they have developed the software to construct these stunning photographic scans of sites. The durational images are made up of many sequential images (taking in the whole image), where they sample vertical lines of pixels from each image in the sequence (located in their normal position), in these examples working in time from left to right. So the first vertical line of pixels on the left is the first vertical line of pixels from the first image, the second vertical line from the corresponding line in the second image and so on. In the first image you can see a normal scene interrupted by vehicles stopped at the traffic lights (also, note the change in the shadow on the side of the bridge). The second image on the beach has the tide going out and then coming back in again, with a range of repeated patterns further back in the sea that are hard to fathom.

Seen in larger prints they are full of subtle nuances and temporal surprises. And very beautiful.

Cape Canaveral

Cape Canaveral

The new launch tower at Cape Canaveral, very similar to the one used for the Saturn Five launches. The new heavy lifting rockets and their landing modules appear very similar to their Apollo programme equivalents. Cape Canaveral is wonderful, but increasingly has a greater archeological interest  than promise as a place of hope and invention.

Pamphlet 34

Pamphlet 34

My copy of Pamphlet Architecture 34 arrived today – very good to see it. The parts we were worried about, such as the balance between the main text and the secondary commentaries has come out well.     The colour pages really help bring out the work. Big thanks To Meredith Baber from Princeton Architectural Press who was super-helpful and to Mark Stanley for his design work in setting out the book.

The image is of course the digital file for the cover – I will photograph the real thing when some daylight arrives.

If you want a copy there are a bunch of links a couple of posts back.