Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Big Apple Big Hope by PAIROJ PICHETMETAKUL (Pok) 


             "I was drawn into Pairoj’s work when I first saw his Abraham Lincoln portrait.  It captured the soul of a man in what appears to be a time of hardship.  I feel that a portrait should capture the depth and personality of the subject without the distortion of reality. In some of his portraits, he uses a lot of vibrant colors that pop out of the canvas like a layer of texture in different dimensions.  Pairoj’s portraits provokes many questions about reality."  -Ek Wongleecharoen

Pairoj is my friend and like my brother. He started his Big Apple Big Hope in NYC to help homeless people for their better life and unforgetting. He will bring food and money from donation and his own money to homeless people but not only giving them food and money. He even draw their portrait to catch people who walk pass by and stop to pay attention and help them too. From Pairoj warm heart, all artists around NYC are helping him to. Most of the photographer that help him shooting are street photographers and films.




Big Apple Big Hope













Credits

Monday, April 27, 2015




This Woman Is A Photographer By Day 

And A Fighter By Night


Today I would like you to know one of my sister. She is a photographer, a creator, a rawsometreat's chef, and even a fighter.



When you first lay eyes on Watt Sriboonruang, a commercial photographer, you'd have no idea she spends her nights perfecting blocking and striking techniques. 
The five-foot-six, slender Thai-native has been practicing martial arts for nearly a decade, but "discovered" Muy Thai accidentally when she was trying to find a way to gain body muscles. 
"I was sort of skinny back then and wanted to be stronger," she says. 
But it wasn't until years later in New York when her trainer asked her to fight in her first match that she realized she had an even deeper connection to the sport than she knew.
After accepting the invitation, Sriboonruang called her mother to tell her of the news and learned that her grandfather had also been a Muy Thai fighter. She had not known this growing up. 
It would no longer be some adrenaline rush to knock people out in the ring. Now, it was "in [her] blood" and something that she needed to conquer.
Her first fight was in Oct. 2010 and she received a black eye from it; no injuries in the second fight; won the third one; received a deep cut above her left eye in the fourth fight. 
In the most recent fight, her opponent was "a tough one" — usually fighting in a heavier weight class than Sriboonruang's "super bantamweight," which weighs in about 120 to 122 pounds. 
Her cut needed several stitches, and she says her boyfriend got teary-eyed when he saw her injury after the fight, but informed us that she "heals really fast."
When we asked her if she's afraid of getting hit in the face, she asks "Because I'm a girl? What do you mean?"
"If you think you're going to get hit, you'll get hit. If you think you're going to hit them, you'll hit them. You can't be afraid to get hit." 
It's never about winning. 
Watt Sriboonruang
Her record is currently one win out of four fights, but Sriboonruang isn't after a championship title. 
Instead, she says she learns more about who she is as a fighter after each match. 
"If you never challenge yourself, you'll never improve. You have to push yourself. You have to get more experienced opponents each time."
"Losing doesn't necessary disappoint me as long as I get better as a fighter."
But don't get her wrong — she feels "absolutely great" when she wins. 
The hardest part about the fight. 
The training is brutal, she tells us. but necessary if you want to become disciplined. 
"There is so much distraction in New York City — there's your life, social events, parties, food and drink. If you don't have discipline, it's hard to achieve your goals."
Watt Sriboonruang


"Training takes a lot of your time and energy and you have to be really dedicated. If you don't have discipline, you could make an excuse to skip a run because you're exhausted and totally drained from the last training session."
When she's not focused on her physical strength, Sriboonruang's traveling for her photography gigs. She says sometimes, she's "totally burnt out," but just keeps pushing herself. 
"Being disciplined doesn't involve just the training aspect. It's also about your diet and rest. You have to eat well in order to stay strong and healthy for a fight."
You also have to make your weight class. 
Don't become friends with your opponents. 
Not before you fight them, anyway.
The fighting community is tight and close-knit and the female division is even smaller, so Sriboonruang is careful about who she becomes friends with, especially if there's a chance she's going to get in the ring with them. No exception. She doesn't even become "Facebook friends" with them. 
Watt Sriboonruang


It's too hard for her to fight her friends. 
"For some fighters, it's easier for them to fight their friends, but I can't do that. I need to build up an aggression against them. I can't do that with friends."
Sriboonruang doesn't know what her future in fighting holds — she just knows this is her calling for now. Whether or not she'll become "pro" is also undetermined.
"An amateur can turn pro anytime he or she wants, but nobody would want to turn pro when they're not experienced enough and can get destroyed by an opponent who is much more experienced."
"I can't say if I will ever turn pro or not but will keep doing it as I enjoy it so much. Getting better as a fighter is my goal rather than turning pro."
Sriboonruang currently trains with Coban Lookchaomaesaithong of Team Coban in Manhattan.

These are some of her works

PURE








Credits
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/what-its-like-to-be-a-female-fighter-watt-sriboonruang-2012-6#ixzz3YcgS9ER7

Friday, April 24, 2015


Gus Filgate Depicts the Last Suppers of Famous People



        Director Gus Filgate’s new project envisions what the last meals of certain famous individuals would look like. The project, aptly titled “Last Suppers,” are all shared via his blog, and allows him to exercise his interest in photographing and visualizing food in unusual ways. Check out what Filgate envisions would have been Julius Caesar, Jimi Hendrix and Napoleon Bonaparte’s last suppers below.
Julius Caesar





Napoleon Bonaparte



Jimi Hendrix



Credits
http://hypebeast.com/2015/4/gus-filgate-depicts-the-last-suppers-of-famous-people

Wednesday, April 22, 2015



Photographer Justin Bettman Creates Sets From Discarded Furniture On NYC’s Streets


     I love this post by IGNANT.de! New York photographer Justin Bettman and stylist Gozde Eker have created unique sets right on the sidewalks of New York City inviting everyone to shoot their own photos and share them on instagram with the hashtag #setinthestreet. One of their more recent sets that they built was created for one of their followers Jose Luis who wrote to Justin asking him to build a set so that he could propose to his girlfriend. View the video of the coverage of the event.















              Justin Bettman recently built a set for Jose Luis who wrote him a hopeful email saying that he wanted to propose to his girlfriend in one of his sets. View the making-of video for this memorable moment below.




Credits

Sunday, April 19, 2015



Brilliant Photo Manipulations By Erik Johansson

   
     Today I would like to introduce you with a phenomenon photographer "Erik Johansson." He is making the photo that called Manipulation which almost matching with our class multiple portrait assignment except these are more advanced.


“I’m a photographer and retoucher from Sweden. I use photography as a way of collecting material to realize the ideas in my mind.”

      Erik Johansson, a Swedish photographer and retoucher, 4 years ago, when he was still a computer engineering student. Even back them, despite lack of professional training in photography, his wildly creative photo manipulations would be a stand-out example of retouching.
      Erik’s work has a two-fold effect: on the one hand, it’s completely unbelievable and reality-defying, while on the other hand the high-skilled retouching makes it look almost real. The photographer first develops an idea in his head before he sets out to make the pictures; he even models in some of them himself – yes, that’s the blond guy, distorting his face with his own fist!
     Erik says he has been drawing for as long as he can remember – maybe influenced by his painter grandmother – but his first digital camera at the age of 15 opened up a whole new world for the guy: “Being used to drawing it felt quite strange to be done after capturing a photo, it wasn’t the process of creating something in the same way.” He picked up his interest for retouching while studying, and today is a prolific artist, working on both commissions and personal projects. Let his fantasy worlds absorb you!

Expecting Winter


Set Them Free


Groundbreaking


Cut & Fold


Snow Cover


Arms Break, Vases Don’t


Roadworker’s Coffee Break


Fishy Island


Face vs. Fist


Go Your Own Road


Kaffeslump


Order Print


Vertical Turn  Self-Actualization


Big Laundry Day


Stryktålig A Painting Too Real


Electric Guitar



Credits
Text Tom
Erik Johanson: http://erikjohanssonphoto.com/