@novemberr.14: 10:10 PM | 🌚, ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎‏‏‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎‏‏#fyp #foryou #tiktok #foryoupage #viral #foryou

نـۆڤـێـمـبـەر.
نـۆڤـێـمـبـەر.
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Saturday 26 October 2024 19:10:04 GMT
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Hi y’all! I’m Paige Miller, a photographer and recent graduate of the MA Fashion Photography Program at LCF. I’m hosting today’s #LunchAndLearn for #DisabilityHistoryMonth to talk about my work, which explores subjective temporality through a neurodivergent lens, informed by my experience with ADHD. I’ll also be showing y’all how to do one of the post-processing techniques that I used to create my project, Temporal Echoes. 📸 --- My recent work is meant to visualize the mind’s eye.👁️ To ensure my creative process is healthier and more ADHD-friendly, I focus on grounding, tactile, and experimental practices. This resulted in a wide array of experiments such as building and shooting with miniature sets, using light painting and long exposures to slow down my process, and creating many re-iterations of images (similar to the way that memories restructure themselves each time we recall them). These iterations were made from film souping and burning, repetitive scanning, and the main technique I’ll be teaching you today, which I call drag-scanning. ✨♾️ --- To do drag-scanning 〰️ , all you need is a print of the image you’d like to manipulate and a simple flatbed scanner. Make sure to set your scanner to a larger scan size than the print itself so that you have room to move it around, and then all you have to do is drag the print across the scanner as it scans. It may take a bit of experimentation with the movement to produce your desired effect. --- Drag-scanning creates ripples 🌀 that I began calling “echoes”, which ultimately led to the title of my project, Temporal Echoes. This effect demonstrated the feeling of being stretched across multiple temporalities; our imaginings of the future, ruminations on the past, and existence across endless digital virtualities via our phones all exist as a constant overlay on our present. That feeling of being ungrounded in time is often exacerbated by ADHD, which I wanted to visualize. --- Thanks for watching! 👋
Hi y’all! I’m Paige Miller, a photographer and recent graduate of the MA Fashion Photography Program at LCF. I’m hosting today’s #LunchAndLearn for #DisabilityHistoryMonth to talk about my work, which explores subjective temporality through a neurodivergent lens, informed by my experience with ADHD. I’ll also be showing y’all how to do one of the post-processing techniques that I used to create my project, Temporal Echoes. 📸 --- My recent work is meant to visualize the mind’s eye.👁️ To ensure my creative process is healthier and more ADHD-friendly, I focus on grounding, tactile, and experimental practices. This resulted in a wide array of experiments such as building and shooting with miniature sets, using light painting and long exposures to slow down my process, and creating many re-iterations of images (similar to the way that memories restructure themselves each time we recall them). These iterations were made from film souping and burning, repetitive scanning, and the main technique I’ll be teaching you today, which I call drag-scanning. ✨♾️ --- To do drag-scanning 〰️ , all you need is a print of the image you’d like to manipulate and a simple flatbed scanner. Make sure to set your scanner to a larger scan size than the print itself so that you have room to move it around, and then all you have to do is drag the print across the scanner as it scans. It may take a bit of experimentation with the movement to produce your desired effect. --- Drag-scanning creates ripples 🌀 that I began calling “echoes”, which ultimately led to the title of my project, Temporal Echoes. This effect demonstrated the feeling of being stretched across multiple temporalities; our imaginings of the future, ruminations on the past, and existence across endless digital virtualities via our phones all exist as a constant overlay on our present. That feeling of being ungrounded in time is often exacerbated by ADHD, which I wanted to visualize. --- Thanks for watching! 👋

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