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Mahesh waran

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May 6, 2011, 7:04:18 AM5/6/11
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Maheshwaran Arunachalam <mahesh0...@yahoo.com>
Date: 6 May 2011 12:14
Subject: Fw: `~` b L u E z `~` ``` cinemagraphs :: next step phOtography ```
To: mahe <sergean...@gmail.com>




--- On Sat, 4/30/11, `deepak punjabi` <indigob...@yahoo.com> wrote:

From: `deepak punjabi` <indigob...@yahoo.com>
Subject: `~` b L u E z `~` ``` cinemagraphs :: next step phOtography ```
To: "kudla" <kudla...@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Saturday, April 30, 2011, 2:29 AM

 

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Have you ever seen a photo move? Artists develop amazing cinemagraphs that take 'stills' to the next level

By Daniel Bates
Last updated at 7:27 PM on 26th April 2011


It is, in their own words, ‘something more than a photo but less than a video’.

Two artists have created a new way to to record your special moments - pictures with movement.

The ‘cinemagraphs’ look like still photos but actually feature a subtle area of movement designed to grab your eye and keep you looking. The effect is slightly eerie - but utterly captivating.

Hair-raising: Cinemagraphs may look like stills, but they feature a subtle area of movement designed to grab your eye. These animated photos are the work of Jamie Beck (pictured) and her fellow artist Kevin Burg


Turning a page: The cinemagraphs work by using GIFs, a type of picture format similar to a JPEG which has been around since the invention of home computers but has come into its own with broadband internet


In one shot of a crowded square, bodies are frozen in time, but one man quietly turns the pages of his newspaper.

Another photo of a restaurant terrace is brought to life by the reflection of a taxi going past in the window.

And a picture of photographer Jamie Beck, one of the two behind the project, leaps off the screen when her hair starts to blow in a breeze.

Miss Beck has worked with motion graphics artist Kevin Burg to make the cinemagraphs by using GIFs, a type of picture format similar to a JPEG which has been around since the invention of home computers.

Only now with broadband internet are they bringing it to life with a startling effect.

‘Our cinemagraphs are a way of adding motion to a still image,’ Miss Beck said.


Not as simple as they look: The more complex animated photos take the artists an entire day to pull together


In most cases she shoots the photos and Mr Burg adds on motion-graphics over several hours of painstaking editing.

The more complex ones take an entire day to pull together.

New York-based Miss Beck told The Atlantic magazine: ‘There's something magical about a still photograph - a captured moment in time - that can simultaneously exist outside the fraction of a second the shutter captures.

‘We feel there are many exciting applications for this type of moving image.

‘There's movement in everything and by capturing that plus the great things about a still photograph you get to experience what a video has to offer without the time commitment a video requires.’

She added that sharing websites such as Tumblr have been essential for helping them publish their work and getting them an audience.


Eerie effect: Cinemagraphs are calming to watch as only one area moves - and they are silent












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