No cameras, no lenses, no computer. This is mind blowing. Robert Buelteman knows how to push boundaries.
Buelteman’s technique is an elaborate extension of Kirlian photography (a high-voltage photogram process popular in the late 1930s) and is considered so dangerous and laborious that…
(Source: solsticeretouch)
That is amazing.
1 Year in One Photograph
Eirik Solheim of Oslo, Norway spent an entire year shooting the time-lapse photograph above. The finished product — which begins with January on the left and ends with December on the right — is the result of a script that grabbed one vertical sliver from the 3,888 photos he snapped during the day. Notice how short the spring and autumn are? Click here to check out a hi-res version of the image.
[Via source]
(Source: solsticeretouch)
This is so brilliant I don’t know what to say.
Fotoshop by Adobe
This is the most hilarious video I’ve ever seen as far as Photoshop goes.
Talk about the real truth beyond beauty products!
This commercial isn’t real, and neither are society’s standards of beauty.
I need to put little stickers next to ads when I go into stores next to products. Want real results? You need Solstice Retouch, not Revlon.
Use healing brush to target blemishes at their source.
The results are so good, they’re almost unreal…istic
The whole thing is full of one liners.
Watch. This. Right. Now.
Shot by the talented Jesse Rosten!
(Source: solsticeretouch)
Via Solstice - Creative Entertainment
Totally cool.
30 Years of BAD Pictures
This is a seriously amazing watch.
Some of the highlights of Bruce Dale’s 30 year career at National Geographic including 10 trips to China beginning in the late 1970’s, the hologram cover for the 100th anniversary edition, and mounting a camera on the tail of a jumbo jet for in-flight photographs. Photographs are copyrighted by Bruce Dale or National Geographic.
Produced with special help from Dan Steinhardt and Epson America.
Thank you to Tony for the find!
(Source: solsticeretouch)
Via Solstice - Creative Entertainment

![That is amazing.
solsticeretouch:
1 Year in One Photograph
Eirik Solheim of Oslo, Norway spent an entire year shooting the time-lapse photograph above. The finished product — which begins with January on the left and ends with December on the right — is the result of a script that grabbed one vertical sliver from the 3,888 photos he snapped during the day. Notice how short the spring and autumn are? Click here to check out a hi-res version of the image.
[Via source]](http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lxj83wtLGP1qknfz7o1_500.jpg)




