Wishful Saturation
I should come to terms with this. Subconsciously, I have been color-correcting my most recent shots to feel more "summer" than they actually are. It's little things in the RAW conversion: "Maybe a bit more red", "A little bit of saturation won't hurt", "Shouldn't the sky be more blue?" But I loved summer so much! The light! The people! The sky!
"Hi, my name is David."
"Hi, David."
"I abuse saturation for seasonal gain."
photo-ish , seasons-ish , summer-ish by tangentialist at 11:27 AM on 29 Oct 05 | Perm-a-link | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)
"I'm not telling you who to vote for, I'm just saying..."
—cop on 6th Avenue today, blanket-ticketing cyclists for lane and reflector violations. [via Gothamist]
cycling-ish , paranoid-ish , police-ish , tumble-ish by tangentialist at 11:24 AM on 27 Oct 05 | Perm-a-link | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
Google Translation: Sumo Indiscretion
A poignant and poetic excerpt here from a Google Japanese-to-English ("Beta"!!!) translation of a Sumo wrestler's blog (as mentioned on boingboing today):
When you mention some contents, * & *
It was in university age Martial romance And
By your Trick of liquor habit (@ @) Story,
As for the classmate doing what, the る?
While with laughing at the story which is said, you speak eternally.
Tell me about it, man.
google-ish , japan-ish , sumo-ish , translation-ish by tangentialist at 12:32 PM on 25 Oct 05 | Perm-a-link | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Williamsburg Franchise Watch 2: UPS Store 2
It's a rare and wonderful thing to be able to name-check two of my own posts in one day. Thank god for the arrival of the UPS Store to the Williamsburg Franchise Watch. For those of you too engrossed in this paragraph to click away, the neighborhood of northside Williamsburg, former quiet hamlet of Polish and Italian families turned ruggedly-hip artist district, turned red-hot post-grad bobo wonderland, turned mezzanine-condominium Shangri-La, has begun cautiously to offer its storefront real estate to national franchise interests. This summer's entry, at the corner of North 5th and Bedford, a Subway sandwich shop, barely escaped the focused attention of the Williamsburg Warriors and now serves as the daytime post of local curmudgeon Leo Kowalski. A casual visual survey of the traffic at Subway (namely, whenever I walk by) indicates a relatively light customer base, though it is next door to a funeral parlor.
And then today, the UPS Store made its franchised intentions known on North 7th, just across from the notorious Finger Building. So far, there are a couple boxes and some papers strewn around inside. And this big banner. No hilariously ironic signage yet, but I'll keep my eyes peeled.
Oh, on that note, there's a Sparky's hot dog place opening up on Lafayette, between Houston and Bleecker. Just north of the aforementioned ironically-signed UPS Store. Coincidence or strange chain consipiracy? You make the call.
franchise-ish , upsstore-ish , williamsburg-ish by tangentialist at 10:32 AM on 20 Oct 05 | Perm-a-link | Comments (5) | TrackBack (0)
Photoblogging 2: Periphery, The New Photoblog (I Still Love You, Flickr)
Before I continue, let me point out periphery.tangentialism.com, which I finished this weekend. It's a Photoblog-with-a-capital-P that I'll be directing my daily photos at for a while, supplemented by Flickr for random shots and sharables.
I wrote Periphery because I've spent too long telling other photobloggers that "I really want to have my own photoblog". I love Flickr, and I've been posting regularly there for over a year, but while I use it to photoblog, it didn't feel like "my own photoblog". It's been very good for me, both as a photographer and as a photoblogger, and the community of sharing there is so rich that I don't see any reason to leave, but as even Eric Costello points out, in this interview with Adaptive Path, Flickr wasn't originally put together for Photobloggers-with-a-capital-P:
Flickr was really envisioned initially as an organizational tool for an individual who has this huge collection of photos. The social network was built in just so that you could restrict access to your photos. But what has really taken off with Flickr is that it’s turned out to be a great platform for sharing with the masses, and not just with your small collection of friends...
But we found that it took off when we got some excellent photographers who were interested in using Flickr as a new kind of photo blog, so that the world could see their pictures. And that, I think, is really the primary usage of Flickr now.
In fact, I've changed with Flickr. When I signed up, I only imagined I'd post photos to share for kicks--and you can see that in my early posts, of signs and vacations and cameraphone shots. In the last year, mostly because of the vibrant local community of photobloggers, I've fallen back in love with photography, and with looking at nice, big images, which isn't Flickr's strong point.
In fact, the biggest problem with using Flickr to photoblog is that everyone's first glimpse of your photo is a wallet-sized snapshot, and I'd like people to be have a larger image to gaze upon when they load the page. On Periphery, that's about 900 pixels wide versus 240 pixels wide, which amounts to a lot when I'm posting a photo I'm proud of (ideally, every shot I post). Conversely, 900 pixels make it difficult to hide shoddy work, which raises the bar--a good thing.
Though I briefly considered using Eliot's Admiral package to get around the image size issue, while still keeping my roots in Flickr, I decided against it. Frankly, I think Flickr and I need some space. I've been asking too much of Flickr lately, expecting Flickr to be all things to me at all times. I'll still call Flickr up for daily shots of friends and odd visual couplings (just like old times), but I think the new space at Periphery will make for an interesting change in how I work and edit, and I need that change.
Working on Periphery was incredibly fun, and it came together very quickly (about three weeks in my free time). It's written in Ruby on Rails (geek out!) with a couple judicious visual effect-y, AJAX-y things. I'm holding a couple features back until I have enough photos to make them interesting, but I'm already happy with the way it works. Hopefully you will be, too.
Thanks are in order to a few people: Eliot and Raul's sites both served as inspirations for the layout and features of the site. In particular, the navigation effects are the sincerest form of flattery of Eliot's (and Kottke's) work. Actually, if they're listed in the "Links" section of the photoblog, they're probably an inspiration in one form or another. Thanks to Raul, Keith, and Nick for looking it over and offering advice. And thank you, so much, to Flickr. I'm here because of you, Flickr.
flickr-ish , meta-ish , photo-ish , photoblog-ish by tangentialist at 08:08 PM on 17 Oct 05 | Perm-a-link | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)