Showing posts with label tech tools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tech tools. Show all posts

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Let's Get Synthy!

Flattr this



My brother-in-law just got married this weekend, so I've been in festive mode (which really isn't a good enough excuse for the bad title of this blog post).

Ben and his beautiful wife Caitlin had such an amazing wedding at an estate in Harrisville, NH. It is at the top of  a hill overlooking Mount Monadnock, Harrisville Pond and countless tree topped hills; with a full panoramic view of it all from the estate's deck and lawn. 

I took several photos standing in one place on the deck but turning my body so I could get as many continuous shots of the panoramic view and today I created a  Photosynth of the scene; which I just found out about at a recent edcamp unconference in Keene (thanks Matthew). 

Here's a description from their website of what photosynth is/does:

"Photosynth takes your photos, mashes them together and recreates a 3D scene out of them that anyone can view and move around in.
Different than static photos and video, Photosynth allows you to explore details of places, objects, and events unlike any other media. You can’t stop video, move around and zoom in to check out the smallest details, but with Photosynth you can. And you can’t look at a photo gallery and immediately see the spatial relation between the photos, but with Photosynth you can."


Here it is below! Go ahead and click the Photosynth tips box off after you read it so it doesn't block your view. Okay now to look at the view just click the right or left arrow since that is the only directions that I turned. Then if you are looking at a photo you like and want to zoom in hit the plus button - even a few times to get right in. 



Of course I instantly can see how great this gadget would be for art shows/galleries. Instead of taking a shaky tour with a handheld video camera you can take shots all around the room and allow the people to walk around. You actually don't have to do a circle like I did too - as long as the shots have some overlap the program can stitch them together and you can meander around the space.

I searched their site for "art gallery" to see if anyone is doing this and found loads:

HAEA Faculty Art Show by Chanbliss
& a simpler one:
SB Art Gallery 

Another great use for Photosynth is making a 3D rendering of a statue or object like Matthew Ragan did below. I would imagine for a gallery, you could even do this with smaller objects so people can really take a good look at a sculpture.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Google Streetview

Google Streetview for Artists

Like most technology on the internet my husband shows me, I initially shrugged off Google Streetview and later came back and became obsessed with it. 

If you haven't used Google Streetview... its much more than the fuzzy satellite pics that Google gave us a while back. This is how it is explained on Wikipedia: "Google Street View is a technology featured in Google Maps and Google Earth that provides panoramic views from various positions along many streets in the world.[1]"  That I don't think is the best description... basically you can go to various cities around the globe and virtually walk down the streets. You can see the view from every angle from every step you are at: you can look up, look down, and turn to see the view to the right or left. 

My new obsession  with Google Streetview started when I was visiting the blog of the talented artist Leslie Hawes who often uses Google Streetview to find landscape compositions in far off places. Here is a drawing she did of a home in France. 

  "France is beautiful. 


As I travel, virtually, using Google Street View, I discover that so many places look like somewhere else.  This could be Ireland or Bucks County, Pennsylvania. But no matter where I find a stone building, I will likely stop to draw." Leslie Hawes



Leslie also takes part in a blog called the Virtual Paint Out  that blogger Bill Guffey started. "The Virtual Paint Out:  VIRTUAL PAINTOUTS USING GOOGLE STREET VIEW AS A RESOURCE FOR TRAVELING THE WORLD TO FIND INTERESTING LOCATIONS AND SUBJECTS TO PAINT." 


Basically Guffey posts a location that is available on Google Streetview and viewers of the blog travel there on their computer, find a good composition and create an artwork of that place which he then posts on the blog. Its amazing to see them all together and the different things people find in his posted destinations. Here is a recent Paint Out of Norway.

My head is swimming with possible ways to use this  technology... art history lessons, compositions for artwork... how about an illustrator being able to find the perfect background in a faraway land without leaving his home. Or let's say you need a reference of someone walking across a road or on a bike... just go to a major city on Google Streetview you will most likely find one (with the face blurred out of course). I even know where to find a nice shot of a man bending over gardening (thanks to my friend Barbara). 

Here I am in Taipei,  on a little sidestreet just steps off of a major road with huge large buildings... because its  not just the major roads with the landmarks... its small roads, roads with houses... surrounding country roads... 

Taipei,  side street


Taipei,  on a major road


Although I have many plans for Streetview, including a virtual tour somewhere with my students and maybe a landscape, I have for now just amassed an album on my facebook account of significant places from my past present and future; a sample of which I will end this post with. 


My current studio... in Keene, NH


Northern Illinois University where I spent 4 college years and think I graduated from (I still have those nightmares where they take the diploma from my hands)

Across the Kankakee River from my mom's house in Illinois

My favorite coffee shop in Seattle where I lived for a short 2 years. 




Take a virtual tour yourself! Here is a map of the current coverage of Google Streetview!