Chris Meyer
Chris Meyer of Crish Design has been involved in both the music industry as a musician, sound designer, recording engineer, and designer of electronic instruments and recording devices; as well as the motion graphics industry where he and his wife Trish create animations for broadcast, film, special venues, trade shows, and web sites. However, before both, he had an interest in photography - an interest he continues to nurture today through the use of photographs as the starting point in mixed media art, often employing experimental printing techniques.
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Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Chris Meyer | 09/30- 08:02 AM
A new blog on using digital photography in abstract and mixed media art.
“That’s a photograph?!?” This is the usual response I get when I explain that the underlying image in one of my mixed media works is actually a photo of the real world. And I consider it to be a compliment.
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Friday, November 20, 2009
Chris Meyer | 11/20- 08:43 PM
Combining dolly moves with timelapse photography to show off my favorite region of the country.
Having made the move recently from California to New Mexico, loving to shoot both states (and points in between), and having recently bought a Canon 5D Mark II, I was happy to have recently encountered Timescapes.org, who is currently working on a film about the area - Southwest Light - which is being shot timelapse with DSLRs such as the 5D. What makes some of these scenes particularly interesting is the motion control dolly they are using: A stepper motor is incrementing the camera’s position between shots along a slide rail, combining the sensation of panning (a “dolly shot”) with timelapse - nice work.
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Sunday, November 01, 2009
Chris Meyer | 11/01- 08:50 AM
Distressing a photo to accidentally create a prize-winning collage.
Although I have spent a fair amount of money to buy camera equipment and digital printers which can produce a more-perfect image, the truth is that my personal aesthetic is more along the lines of wabi-sabi: an appreciation for the aged, weathered, and decayed. So what happens when I take a clean photo of the San Diego Museum of Modern History, a fine modern architectural example of a glass, metal, and stone? I have to distress it. The irony is, the result won a prize - and few realized it was a digital print of a photograph. Here’s one photograph’s journey into the realm of accelerated aging:
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Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Chris Meyer | 10/28- 08:56 PM
Eye candy: A quick shot at photographing falling snow.
We had our first good snow in the mountains today. At one point when the flakes got particularly large, my wife Trish asked if I could get a photo that showed off the individual flakes, as her PowerShot SD870 IS was insisting on too long of a shutter time. So I picked up the Canon 5D mkII, slapped on its stock 24-105mm L IS lens, opened it up all the way to f=4.0 with a 1/2000 shutter speed at ISO 500, and fired a few pics through the office window (I know - a real man would have went outside).
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Sunday, October 18, 2009
Chris Meyer | 10/18- 11:57 AM
A balloon story that isn’t a hoax.
For those who have made the move to digital cameras, an inevitable consequence of the relentless march of technology is that we end up with cameras that are “obsolete” (because the new model has more pixels, less compression, video capabilities, etc.).
So what do we do with those old cameras? How about using them to get a shot we otherwise wouldn’t consider going for, because we might lose the camera in the process?
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Thursday, October 08, 2009
Chris Meyer | 10/08- 10:23 AM
HAL displays mad Photoshop skills. Should he collect the royalties?
A very interesting system was recently demonstrated at SIGGRAPH Asia that allows a user to make a rough sketch of their desired composite image, labeling the components of the composite (dog, ball, etc.). The software then searches for images that match the name and shape that the user specified, compares the foreground objects to background candidates for suitability (in other words, how easy they will be to composite together), and then creates candidate composites:
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Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Chris Meyer | 10/07- 09:10 AM
Shooting hot-air balloons (and robot vacuum cleaners) with extended shutter times.
The Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta is on right now, and it is truly one of the more joyous man-made phenomenon to shoot: hundreds of balloons of all shapes and colors from over 50 countries over a 200-acre area.
But as much fun as they are flying, even more fun for an experimental photographer is seeing them at night during a “balloon glow.” After the sun sets, the pilots inflate the balloons (but keep them on the ground); the flames that generate the hot air also illuminate the balloons from inside.
And, even more fun than a balloon glow, is setting your camera to very long exposure times and experimenting with different camera movements.
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Tony Donaldson | 08/20- 04:14 PM
New NIKKOR Glass Yields an Unprecedented Seven Lenses Released to Date in 2010 MELVILLE, NY (August 19, 2010) – Today, Nikon Inc. announced four new lenses…
Tony Donaldson | 08/19- 11:08 PM
Enhanced Guide Mode and the Ability to Shoot 1080p High Definition (HD) Video with Full Time Auto Focus Allow Users to Capture with Confidence MELVILLE, NY…
Scott Gentry | 03/18- 04:12 PM
That little update that messed things up! I first learned about this on our sister site
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