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Mailinglist:wwp@yahoogroups.com
Sender:Francis Fougere
Date/Time:2013-Jul-01 19:37:00
Subject:Re: (unknown)

Thread:


wwp@yahoogroups.com: Re: (unknown) Francis Fougere 2013-Jul-01 19:37:00
I am going to need a late edit time.
Francis

From:  Bostjan Burger <#removed#>
Reply-To:  <#removed#>
Date:  Thursday, May 30, 2013 1:23 PM
To:  "#removed#" <#removed#>,
"#removed#" <#removed#>,
"#removed#"
<#removed#>
Subject:  (unknown)

 
 
 
   

Dear "pano-friends", the new WWP event ( http://www.worldwidepanorama.org )
is going to start very soon and some help with the essay might be welcome to
get the idea about your photography:

Machines - essay by Andrew Varlamov

Open Photography: 13-23 June 2013
Open Editing: 13-30 June 2013
Live: 5 July 2013

Experienced WWP teammates still remember WWP events where machines took
part,

such as "Energy" and "Transportation", and now years later they can create a
new view of things.

You can meet machines everywhere - indoors (washing machine, vacuum cleaner,
sewing machine) and outdoors (various vehicles, cranes, funiculars, garden
pumps). Some kinds of machines have long lifespans - windmills, shadoofs,
rickshaws, honey extractors - and they continue to work as usual, looking as
in former times or changing its appearance and workplace. Other kinds of
machines are ready for retirement into museums and collections, and it is
possible to find them only in backwater districts - milk separators,
jukeboxes.

Machines become TV stars, Discovery Channel devoted popular serials to
X-machines (machines designed for extreme loads and tasks) and to machines
designed by Leonardo Da Vinci but never before realized (mostly siege
machines).

Sometimes machines change urban skyline and make it easy to distinguish a
harbour from an amusement park, or a shipyard from a construction site.

Where is line of demarkation between tools and machines? Why does the
dictionary consider a shovel as a tool rather than a machine? When a machine
consists of mechanisms, where is the edge - can one mechanism be a machine
or does a machine consist of two and more mechanisms ?

In most cases mechanisms of machines hide under their shell, and the
panographer has to find the exact point of view.

Additionally the photographer may capture a "decisive moment" - when a human
feeds the machine - fills fuel or consumables, or repairs it. Perhaps the
decisive moment would be an action produced by a machine (e.g., opening a
bridge).

The theme is so wide that amateurs of Artistica direction could try to
"shoot" an imaginary machine (for example - Turing machine) or impossible
machine (perpetuum mobile).

Be creative - try to shoot panorama never seen before, it can be waiting for
you right next door!

:) Bo?tjan

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