Some cool cnc milling parts images:
CNC Milled Sustenuto Monochord Knob Logo – Brian Eno Speaker Flowers Sound Installation at Marlborough Home
Image by Dominic’s pics
View this virtual tour of 152 photos as a Slideshow
Detail of a knob on a Sustenuto Monochord built by the luthier Jon Dickinson.
The logo that has been CNC (Pc Numerically Controlled) machined / milled onto the prime also seems as a brand on the instrument. The symbol is explored later in this set, and also the echoes it inspires can be seen in a separate set.
The macro image is a composite constructed up from many photographs taken utilising inexpensive extension tubes on an SLR (and with the camera locked in place with a tripod). The rings permit close focusing, but with no manage of aperture, a "largest" lens aperture defaults, and consequently a quite shallow depth of field benefits. Utilizing Photoshop to edit a layered image it was achievable to preserve some detail from the prime and sides of the knob, as well as in significantly of the base.
See also the related "Brian Eno 77 Million Paintings" set, – an exhibition that ran concurrently at Fabrica Gallery for the duration of the festival.
This image is element of a set of pictures of the Brian Eno Speaker Flowers Sound Installation at Marlborough House (and also of the house itself) on the Old Steine, Brighton, East sussex, UK. The exhibition was presented by Fabrica Art Gallery, as element of the Brighton Festival, Might 2010. The installation contains the poems and words of Rick Holland.
The Grade I listed home was constructed circa 1765 , purchased at a single time by the Duke of Marlborough, and substantially remodelled by the Scottish architect Robert Adam.
A lot more links:
Brian Eno Shop
Arena Television series theme tune video by Brian Eno.
Microsoft Windows Start-Up Sounds collection video (Which includes Windows 95 music by Brian Eno).
Marlborough Property (My Brighton and Hove)
The Architecture of Robert Adam (1728-1792) from RCAHMS (the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland)
Humberts Leisure Brochure on house [.pdf download]
Some of the pictures in this set are presented in a number of versions produced attainable utilizing HDR (Higher Dynamic Variety) photography – these variations are displayed with more than one exposure, gamma, "local adaptation" compression or "unsharp mask" method.
Many rooms had their windows screened employing coloured Crêpe paper / tissue paper. This gave their illumination a colour cast – which has been exaggerated (or neutralised) on an image by image basis. The actual experience of the coloured light was one of only a slight and soft hue.
In some instances the images have modified to give an architectural, classical, "two-point" point of view – with forced, parallel verticals.