My Photog Blog List

GServo's Photography & Art

Showing posts with label gservo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gservo. Show all posts

Sunday, December 27, 2009

Photo Fu Physical Training quick note

On Advice from friend BaristaOnDuty

@gservo I'm Gonna Give you A Quick Tip ;) If you are Up 16 hours A Day and  you Do 10-15 Pushups Each Hour you Get More Out Of It Than Say 100 in 2 Sessions ;)

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Photo-Fu Comic Break: Gservo’s Top 5 Must Read, off the beaten path ,Comics series and stuff


20091112-DSC_0007, originally uploaded by gservo.

My outlook on comics books is rather eclectic, lots of things I like old and new. This list here represent the top five things I feel are must reads that are just a little different . Ill do a more normal list soon.

5 Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon-, no Not the movie which was freaking awesome to me. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon was a twelve-volume comic series published by Comics One and written by Andy Seto. The comic is based on a 5 book series known as the Crane-Iron Pentalogy –You Read this and the movie gets exponentially better. The only way to find this series is on ebay

4 Akira Manga- Akira (アキラ?) is a black and white serial manga or graphic novel by Katsuhiro Otomo. Set in a post-apocalyptic Neo-Tokyo, the work uses conventions of the cyberpunk genre to detail a saga of turmoil.[1] Initially serialised in the pages of Young Magazine from 1982 until 1990, the work was collected in six volumes upon completion by Japanese publisher Kodansha.[2] The work was first published in an English language version by the Marvel Comics imprint Epic Comics, one of the first manga works to be translated in its entirety.[3] Otomo's art on the series is considered outstanding, and the work is a breakthrough for both Otomo and the manga form.[1] An identically titled anime film adaptation was released in 1988 after releasing 5 comics, shortening the plot, but with its structure and scenes heavily informed by the manga and its serial origins.[4]

3- Bloom County – Very influential to me, I read this as a kid and eventual bought all of the collections. Bloom County was an American comic strip by Berkeley Breathed which ran from December 8, 1980 until August 6, 1989. It examined events in politics and culture through the viewpoint of a fanciful small town in Middle America, where children often have adult personalities and vocabularies and where animals can talk. It originated from a comic strip known as The Academia Waltz, which Breathed produced for the student newspaper, The Daily Texan, while attending the University of Texas.

2- Squee's Wonderful Big Giant Book of Unspeakable Horrors – This Will mess you up something fierce, your mind will cry, you will have night mares, but its all worth it “Squee is a fictional character in Jhonen Vasquez's comic book Johnny the Homicidal Maniac, who was later featured in a four-issue series, published by Slave Labor Graphics. This was eventually collected as the TPB , titled Squee's Wonderful Big Giant Book of Unspeakable Horrors. The collection also contains the Meanwhiles which originally appeared in the individual issues of JTHM but were left out of the JTHM: Directors Cut TPB [1].’

1 Gold Digger- http://www.antarctic-press.com Gold Digger is a manga-style comic book series, written and drawn by Fred Perry, and published by Antarctic Press. Started in 1991, the comic tells the story of the extended Diggers family, who live in a fictional version of Atlanta, Georgia.
The idea of Gold Digger was created by Fred Perry during his tour of duty in the First Gulf War. A budding manga artist, Fred realised that his squadmates would pay money for pictures of beautiful women. He put this together with his love of Indiana Jones films to create Gina Diggers, an archeologist/scientist. When he got home, he created a bodyguard named Brittany, who was a werecheeta
The Best Geek Comic of all time its addictive, well worth the investment to read in from the beginning on dvd Antarctic Press delivers EVERY SINGLE ISSUE of Gold Digger material Fred Perry has ever done to date, from the first miniseries to color issue #100, in one convenient, encyclopedic, two-DVD-ROM archive collector's set! It references everything Geek at some point and is my Favorite Comics series of all time

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

links of intrest from my twitter


Tweet by @phototube :Images from the #Lighting Essentials Flickr Pool http://tinyurl.com/yjtkjo8
  #photography



Tweet by @ScottBourne :  3 things you should know about creativity - http://bit.ly/2o9V2r - #photog



 
Tweet by @sasishan : Factors to Consider when Choosing a Digital SLR #Camera http://tiny.cc/BodUR
   #photography #photo




Monday, November 9, 2009

My "Trade Secrets"

I love it when people--especially members of this community--take ideas and run with them. This one is no exception...


chasejarvis.com

A place I would like to do a ‘Photo Walkabou’t : Governors Island, New York


Manhattan and Governors Island, originally uploaded by JesseLoesch.
Governors Island, in the heart of New York Harbor, is only 800 yards from Lower Manhattan, A former Military base. It was ‘mothballed in 1996’.

In 2003 the island was sold to the people of New York for one dollar (usd) Governors Island Preservation and Education Corporation (GIPEC) oversees 150 acres of the Island, while the National Park Service manages the balance, the 22-acre Governors Island National Monument which includes two 1812-era forts.

The 172-acre Island is about 22 city-blocks long from tip to tip. The northern 92 acres of the Island are the Governors Island Historic District and are open to the public for picnics, tours, concerts, car-free biking, and more. The 80-acre non-historic South Island, full of decrepit barracks and warehouses, is currently closed, undergoing major demolition work and slated for redevelopment.

Governors Island by the Numbers:

* 172 acres total
* 102 landfill acres added to original island from subway excavations
* 92-acre National Historic Landmark District and New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission Historic District on North Island
* 3 historic fortifications
* 52 landmarked buildings totaling 1.4 million square feet
* 80 acres of non-historic land south of Division Road
* 3 working ferry docks
* More than 1,600 trees
* Closest point on land to the face of the Statue of Liberty

http://govislandblog.com/ is the best source of New information about the park