Batik: Wallpaper for iPad
24 June 2010
Tap & hold image to save to your photo library. (JPEG, 1024 px)

Tap & hold image to save to your photo library. (JPEG, 1024 px)

Tap & hold image to save to your photo library. (JPEG, 1024 px)

Tap & hold image to save to your photo library. (JPEG, 1024 px)

Tap & hold image to save to your photo library. (JPEG, 1024 px)

The closing credit of Karate Kid caught my attention, instead of Jackie Chan’s signature bloopers, the credit was embedded with photographs of the cast members, the movie producers, and family members, noticably, Will & Jada Pinket Smith.
Unlike the official shots, the images were carefully curated and processed with a magazine-like approach, a subtle mix of toning, vignette, color & saturation adjustments applied, capturing and further uplifting the mood behind the scene of this authentically Filmed-in-China remake, it was friendly, personal and up-close selections that was more like a family slideshow rather than studio stills.
If anybody knows if the gallery is available somewhere, do let me know.
Update: Behind the Lens with Jasin (via Paul Cush Photography)
| Toy Story 3 ★ | movies.nytimes.com |
This one sentence captures the essence of the movie. The rest is obligatory.
Perhaps no series of movies has so brilliantly grasped the emotional logic that binds the innate creativity of children at play to the machinery of mass entertainment.
| Images from the iPhone 4 ★ | engadget.com |
I told you someone knows how to do it right. More images should begin to appear soon in Flickr.
Update:
Another gallery by Boing-boing shows the dynamic range capability of this tiny beast. Now I know why I have always reluctant to purchase a compact point-of-shoot camera, I don’t love having the access to a pocket camera as much as I dislike carrying stuffs, with the iPhone 4, I can just carry one and have a full HD compact video camera and a highly capable 5 MP digital camera with all the apps to tinker with them.
Update: The floodgate is now open.
| There is no perfect camera that is right for everyone ★ | blog.vincentlaforet.com |
Vincent Laforet responding to Jim Jannard of RED:
Every camera has it’s place. Every camera excels in some things – and fails in others. Every end user has specific needs, quality standards, and budgets…
In the end – learn all of the tools (if you can) – and use the best tool for any given job.
Jim made a blunt comment about a certain Canon Commercial that made quite a buzz in the photographic & DSLR flimmaking. He is a technical guy and the camera he invented continues to shape the digital cinematography field, but there’s one problem, aside from a technically capable camera (on paper), his company tends to over promise and under deliver, sometime between the wait, the HD-DSLR cameras started to appear and gained a wide audience support in the mainstream filmmaking industry, I’m not surprised if Jim is pissed off for that, but calling others names and telling them to be ashamed is just a bad, bad move.
This is one of those feats that departs slightly photography but otherwise related to design & architecture.
Truth be told, I have always been an architect at heart. I have recognized the word ‘architect’ deeply in my early childhood, it is the one and only answer whenever someone asked about what I want to do when I grow up. For that, I beg your forgiveness for bringing such an off-topic here.
This is about Shanghai, my former hometown for nearly a decade, and The Apple Store, a proven landmark of retail success where the art of architecture, interior design, retail & technology merge into one.
As an architect, we must know that any successful retail establishment depend on location, location, and location. Recent studies proven, however, location might not be everything. Timing and experience are the two key elements that the industry has yet to bet on, until Apple enters the retail market.
Let’s leave timing & experience for another discussion, let’s see what Apple has in mind for their next store, China’s 2nd flagship Apple Store in Shanghai China.
Apple always pick a highly trafficked site for its store location, for that reason, Apple opened their Beijing store in 2008, in Sanlitun — a popular new area adjacent to the country’s biggest computer commercial zone, it opened shortly prior to the Olympic’s opening week.
For Shanghai, however, Apple is betting on a relatively new area within the oh-so-boring, commercial district of Pudong. (Sure, it is home to most — if not all — China’s greatest skyscraper — but it’s nothing like a genuinely innocent old-shanghai city life).
When I first heard about Shanghai as Apple Store’s next opening, I immediately thought of the Huaihai Road and Xujiahui area in Puxi which currently is the most highly trafficked high-tech and commercial district in Shanghai (Best Buy has a few stores there), and it is home to a few dozen of major Apple resellers, Electronics & Home Appliances, including IKEA.
So what does Apple have in mind?
Beyond the relatively lower cost of rental space (compared to the Puxi commercial district), and their proven retail strategy, they want to be part of history, they want to redraw Shanghai’s skyline and put a bitten fruit as part of Shanghai’s identity, China’s pride to its skyrocketing economy.
| Hard, but not impossible ★ | blogs.adobe.com |
Speaking about apps, I’ve been reading a few thoughts after I wrote To Whom it May Concern; several parties have expressed their concern on how a professional tablet photo/workflow editing app might not come soon.
John Nack on Adobe Blogs expressed the same concern, but without revealing any details, also shed some light of hope:
I find this kind of charming and encouraging. Building a great iPad app for mobile photo review, editing, and sharing is (presently) tougher than one might think, but customer desire is very clear.
Developers like Adobe must come with a brilliantly impossible solution in order to make it work, and more often than not, the solution may be a lot simpler than most of us have thought. If Apple could create an iMovie for iPhone for videos, I’m pretty sure the same thing can be done on photos.