Showing posts with label levitation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label levitation. Show all posts

rachel hulin











The Flying Series by Rachel Hulin
Bio
Rachel Hulin came to New York in 2000 and found a job in production at Condé Nast. Although the pointy shoes and glamorous cafeteria were alluring, she decided to apply to graduate school. She received her MA in studio art two years later and spent several years helping to run the full-time programs at the International Center of Photography. She then moved into photo editing, working at Nerve.com, Rolling Stone, and RADAR magazine, among others. Recently, Rachel has been writing about photography; she started off at Photoshelter’s Shoot! The Blog. She is also a photo columnist for The Daily Beast and The Faster Times.
rachelhulin.com

maria netsounski








Photographer: Maria Netsounski 
Serie: Passion Dream In-Flight
Creative In-Flight Photography by Maria Netsounski. Maria is a landscape and city photographer based in South Holland, Netherlands.  
Her portrait photography ranges from commercial to burlesque fashion spreads while her landscapes depict castles in Luxembourg and postcard images of Niagara Falls. Quite apart from this, she has also produced a series of infrared images, inverting the colors of, for example, palm trees photographed in Miami.
Via: Cuded
More: Flight-Photos

mina sarenac












Antigravity
Photographer: Mina Sarenac

People are resisting gravity every day, but some are trying hard and finding new ways to feel weightless. Antigravity is a project in which I tried to describe feelings of freedom, both physical and emotional. It connects ideas and dreams, fashion and extreme sports. The models were put in real environments, secured with climbing equipment, and the rope was removed in post production.
Via: Behance

hayashi natsumi
















Levitation
Elevando el arte de los autorretratos a otro nivel, la joven fotógrafa japonesa Hayashi Natsumi nos sorprende con una serie de fotos en la cual vemos a la artista fotografiándose levitando por distintos rincones de Tokio. Para captar con su lente el efecto de levitar se necesita que el cuerpo se encuentre en suspensión estable en el aire, o sea, debe existir una fuerza adicional que contrarreste el desplazamiento del cuerpo o el objeto en levitación. Hayashi se las ingenia para poder conseguir este efecto interesante, se le ve haciendo de las suyas por el aire controlando cada detalle de su movimiento y expresión facial para conseguir ese “momento frisado”, como toda una experta desafiando la gravedad.
Blog: yowayowacamera
Via: buenavibragroup

julia fullerton-batten















Julia Fullerton-Batten pertenece a una generación reciente de fotógrafos ingleses (aunque nació en Bremen, Alemania a una corta edad se mudó a Inglaterra) su trabajo no sería posible sin herramientas digitales de post-producción aunque esto no quiere decir que esa sea la parte elemental de su obra.

Julia Fullerton-Batten is one of a recent generation of British photographers (though born in Bremen, Germany at an early age he moved to England), her work would not be possible without digital tools of post-production, but this does not mean that this is the elemental of her work.
Serie: In Between
Web: juliafullerton-batten.com
Via: inspirefirst