Connecticut-based artist Bryan Nash Gill has created a series of large scale prints from cross sections of trees. Gill reveals the sublime power locked inside their arboreal rings, patterns not only of great beauty, but also a year-by-year record of the life and times of the fallen or damaged logs.
Decided it was time to upgrade the camera gear. I’ve been dedicated to Nikon the past 5 years, so it was a tough (but well thought out) decision to make the switch to Canon.
The Tour de France starts this weekend. This year Bradley Wiggins of Team Sky has a fantastic chance to bring the yellow jersey home to the UK for the first time. Ever.
We’ll be supporting him here at Tribe from the 30th June for the next three weeks, and I’ll be in Paris on July 22nd to watch him cross the line on the Champs Élysées.
I’ve been reading the latest Computer Arts magazine and it had an annual report that www.andlarry.com designed. Great use of typography and format. I want to make one!
Found this book and accompanying website by photographer Justin James Muir, created and published as a not-for-profit venture to raise money for his brother recovering from cancer.
Nice idea, and beautiful photography. If only I could grow a beard…
If you can bear to stand the translated sales pitch on this video, it’s well worth a watch. The Marmalade have created a robotic rig that can move a high-speed camera precisely and quickly around an object or scene, creating some stunning slow motion photography.
It’s so crisp and clear, it looks like CGI. You can watch without audio – just enjoy the gorgeous visuals.
This is simply fantastic work by Chul Lee. I love the execution, the subject matter, the extent of the collateral, everything. The tickets look great too – top draw sir.
18 months ago I came to Tribe as a 3D freelancer. I soon became an official member of the Tribe team. On one of my first visits to the studio, Andy let me borrow his Paul Smith Lomography Camera. Every day this camera has sat on my desk, mainly as a ornament. I occasionally remembered to take a photo with it. Last week we tried it out and noticed the film was finished. Today is my last day at Tribe under full time employment. So it seemed fitting to finally get that film developed.