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Hasisi Park

Posted in Photography by Celia on April 30, 2010

Hasisi Park is a photographer and filmmaker. Currently she lives in London, though was born in Korea. She has been commissioned by big names like converse and urban outfitters, and recently by 01 magazine (online magazine out of Vancouver, BC). The last photo I put in because it is a christmas card to her two favourite artists, one of them being Roger Ballen, which I have posted some of his photos too. I look forward to seeing more projects by her!

a gothic craft

Posted in Design, My House, Photography by Celia on April 26, 2010

I made this totally gothic looking craft today. The photograph was taken by Eli Hirtle (we made the print in my sisters darkroom). And the frame, I made today. It’s burnt wood! Moooi, a furniture company I love, has a collection of burnt furniture including chairs, a chandelier, a dresser and a grandfather clock.

Christopher Schreck

Posted in Photography by Celia on April 26, 2010

Here are a few shots I loved from photographer Christopher Schreck.

Sensecam! to photo log your life!

Posted in Photography by Celia on April 25, 2010

This nuts camera is being developed, soon to be released to the public, by Microsoft research, of Cambridge, UK. It is a small camera intended to wear around your neck that takes pictures automatically every 30 seconds, as well as when it senses a change in environment around you.

Ed van der Elsken

Posted in Photography by Celia on March 9, 2010

Annabel Mehran

Posted in Photography by Celia on March 9, 2010

Die Antwoord

Posted in music, Photography by Celia on February 7, 2010

I came across this band a few days ago, on  a random music blog site and was totally curious about them. The things I have found out are; Die Antwoord is a south african rap-rave group! The members are Ninja, Yo-Landi Vi$$er and DJ Hi-Tek. All very white south africans. In the last few days, or week, their website crashed due to overload of views. I love the photo shoot they did with photographer Sean Metelerkamp, also from South Africa. In their black on white, white on black themed music video and website, they have a dwarf mascot who is reading the quotes which are stick and poke tattooed all over Ninjas body. Also Ninja has flat top hair cut and gold teeth! The girl just looks like an attractive brat. DJ Hi-Tek has a PC.

New Camera!!

Posted in My House, Photography by Celia on January 28, 2010

This is my first roll of film with my new Zenit Camera! For most of the roll, I was at an prop rental warehouse. I hope to return there to take some more photos. The rest are just friends and family. I am so excited about this camera!

And I posted a couple more photos I had wanted to put up with the His and Hers post, but I could not at the time.

Also Eli now has a tumblr to show all his incredible photos!!


Jody Rogac

Posted in Interview, Photography by Celia on January 3, 2010


Jody Rogac: one of my top favourite photographers. She is a graduate from Emily Carr University, and is now living in NY. Jody has been published in a few of my favorite magazines; corduroy (NY publication), hobo and pyramid power (both Vancouver publications). She has also done some great commercial shoots with lily + jae, jonathan + olivia, lifetime collective and aritzia. Very familiar, warm and stunning photos!

And here is a little interview with Jody Rogac

C- I have lived in Vancouver for just a short half a year now and have been learning about the people and projects that have come from here. This is how I found your work. Can you share with me your interpretation of Vancouver and some people/ projects that you love from here?
J- Vancouver is great — it’s very beautiful and people are so lovely. Some projects and people I love are:
Pyramid Power magazine (www.pyramidpower.ca)
C- Are there still ties you have to Vancouver? Or have you moved shop completely?
J- There are definitely still ties — my parents live there, along with most of my friends. Although I live in NY I definitely left a piece of my heart in Vancouver.
C- What types of cameras do you usually shoot with? Any favorite film? Do you ever develop yourself?
J- I shoot with a Hasselblad or a Yashika. My film of choice is Kodak 400NC.
C- With free creative control and unlimited access to funds, what would your next ideal photo shoot be?
J- A year-long treck around the world photographing people and places I should stumble upon.

CameraTruck

Posted in Interview, Photography by Celia on November 27, 2009

The CameraTruck is the worlds largest traveling camera! The used delivery truck was converted into a light tight box with a lens on one side. The lens is made of antique glass and the aperture and shutter out of scrap paper and cardboard box. The photo is taken by standing inside the box manually doing it all, including developing the giant negatives. The negatives being 3000 times the size as a regular 35 mm negative. The photographer, Shaun Irving, is selling the prints, average size being 7 feet by 3.5 feet! The majority of the photos were taken in Spain, while a rental truck, with the original lens on it, was on a 5 week tour. Shaun Irving is now back in Virginia, working on his third camera truck.

Interview with Shaun Irving
Camera Truck

C- What was your first successful print of? Do you remember that realization you made it work?

S- The first full-sized print I made was of my brother, sitting in a chair in the side yard of the house I was living in at the time. There was nothing artistic about it–it was a simple test print. I’d had this complicated developing system all set up with this cylinder made from sewer pipe and wire mesh… it failed miserably on the first shot, so I had to think of something else. That’s when I decided to just sponge on the chemistry in the truck instead.
In my mind, the images were still going to come out clean and evenly developed, so I was a bit shocked when I saw all this messiness around that first negative. I thought originally, “Oh, what a disaster,” but after about 5 seconds I realized it was something very beautiful. It’s gone from being just a happy accident to the signature of my pieces.

C- Your first truck, aka peanut, was sold, and the truck for the Spain tour was a rental. You are back in Virginia working on your third camera truck. How is that coming along? Any tour plans for this one?

S-Truck #3 is a bit of a disaster at the moment. It starts (most of the time) and stops, but that’s about the extent of it. I’ve had it for close to two years now and think I’ve put about 10 miles on it, driving it around the block for street cleanings.
I got it for crazy-cheap, about $600. It had been left in the woods and had squirrels living in it. It’s taken a lot of money and effort to get it up to speed, but it’s most of the way there. We’re stripping the paint off it right now as time and money allow, so it looks even worse on the outside than inside–sort of half-sanded, half-flaking paint, with a little graffiti peeking through.

C- Have you had any more ideas for other cameras? Or any other projects?

S- I love the ultra-large-format concept, and the idea that you can take giant photos with some pretty simple implements. One of the challenges/issues/creative limitations of the cameratruck is that you can only photograph what you can drive to… I’ve considered doing a giant tent camera that I could hike into remote locations and set up. Definitely much more labor-intensive, but I think would be interesting in its own way.
I’ve also been toying with doing some public digital projects–I love the old-school flair of film photography, but love the cost and accessibility of digital. Ultimately it’s not the places I go that I like so much but rather the people I meet–I think it would be great to do a series of portraits in particular neighborhoods, all free for the subjects.

C- Approximately how long is the procedure of shooting the negative, then developing those large prints? It must be a beautiful and crude process.

S- It takes about an hour to set up, do test shots, and make my exposure at a site… sometimes a bit less. Developing the image takes a few minutes and is typically done in a darkroom. I spend more and more time with the printmaking part of it, now about 45 minutes to an hour per image. A lot of it depends on the negative quality–some like my Windmills shot I can crank out in my sleep, the negative is that good.

C- Do you have any specific location, object, person or set up scene you want to shoot?

S- I had a few in mind for my Spain tour, and came across most of what I wanted during the tour. I’ve always been looking for that perfect single tree in a field shot… they’re out there, but hard to access with the truck. One of these days, though….
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