XY Plotter by Stephen Cartwright
Long exposure photography of a moving LED light on a plotter.
Burn-In Portraits by Tivon Rice
Images created on CRT display surfaces with incredibly long exposure to a single image - the first one (top) shown the same image for 3 years, 10 months, and 2 days.
Burn-in Portrait #1 -(3 years, 10 months, 2 days)
On a shelf is a small cathode ray tube monitor, lit from within and bearing the image of the artist’s face. There is no actual video of the artist’s face playing; this is just the result of having played a video of his face so continuously on this screen—for 3 years, 10 months, and 2 days, according to the piece’s title—that it burned onto the screen. The subject is twice-departed; it’s strangely touching.
Burn-In Portrait #2 is the second in an annual project to create self-portraits through the process of burning an image into a television screen. Much like an extremely long photographic exposure, a negative of the image is played on a small TV for one year. After this duration, a positive image is indelibly burned into the CRT’s phosphors and can be seen without a DVD player attached.
More on the New Media artist’s work can be found at his website here
Fashion Photography by Jin Chong Yu
Double-exposure photography combines clothing and transparency. Via neochaEDGE:
Check out the works Jin Chongyu styled for “not magazine” and “leap magazine” shooting. He’s studied and traveled in Paris, and now living in shanghai, he established the brand “Lesjin” with book designer Sun Junliang also.
More at neochaEDGE here
Oil Paintings of Jeffrey Morabito
Contemporary oil painter from New York and works around Asia. Style is something like Impressionism mixed with multiple exposures.
Bronson Caves by Brice Bischoff
Experimental long-exposure photography in natural cinematic location:
Notes: A performance executed after sunset. Since early cinema, the Bronson Caves have been used as a film location, mainly appearing in science fiction and western movies.
Complete collection can be seen here
Light painter Jeremy Jackson takes a long exposure photograph, with a laser pen pointing into rain. What is interesting is the snowflake-like shapes that become apparent.
An Executed Convict Returns to Life, in Mind Blowing 3-D Light Paintings via FastCoDesign
It is made using the light painting hologram technique, where a cross section is displayed (in this case, a sliced cross section of a convict which donated his body for science) from a flat screen and captured on a long exposure shot.
Yes, 3-D light painting — in which a flat glowing image is traced through the air to form a quasi-3D version captured in long-exposure photographs — is an amazingly creative hack. But Croix Gagnon and Frank Schott have taken the technique to a truly mindblowing — and emotionally affecting — level with Project 12:31. Their own description can’t be topped: “In 1993, a convicted murderer was executed. His body was given to science, segmented, and photographed for medical research. In 2011, we used photography to put it back together.”
More images and information, including a video, can be found at this link
Super Mario Holograph - by Alex Smith (via it8bit)
Beta testing v.2 of 8bitapp for iPad/Android (http://8bitapp.com). The software generates/saves a pixel for pixel 3d holograph generated from an uploaded image that is captured via a long exposure.
The app is available in the Apple App Store, and is available for the iPhone / iPod Touch. There is also a Flickr Group Pool. There is also a desktop app to help you capture these floating light images via your webcam.
(via it8bit)
Sprocket Rocket - New camera available at Lomography
Analogue (35mm), panoramic lense, forward and backward winding for multiple exposures.
Making Future Magic: iPad light painting by Dentsu London
This film explores playful uses for the increasingly ubiquitous ‘glowing rectangles’ that inhabit the world.
We use photographic and animation techniques that were developed to draw moving 3-dimensional typography and objects with an iPad. In dark environments, we play movies on the surface of the iPad that extrude 3-d light forms as they move through the exposure. Multiple exposures with slightly different movies make up the stop-frame animation.
Read more at the Dentsu London blog:
dentsulondon.com/blog/2010/09/14/light-painting/
and at the BERG blog:
berglondon.com/blog/2010/09/14/magic-ipad-light-painting/
Potsdamer Platz in Berlin by Michael Wesely
This photograph took 2 YEARS of exposure!
Featured in an article on the longest exposures in photography.
Square Love : Chia-Yi Lin (via roamin)
(via guru-guru)