Posts Tagged ‘Photography’

Transparent Nostalgia

Wednesday, February 1st, 2012

Stumbled across an amazing collection of original Motorsports slides today for sale on eBay.

It really brings to mind the glorious beauty of film and trans­parency photography.

We here at Influx towers are of course obvious revelers in the joys of digital photo­graphy. We have utilised the full quiver of readymade tools that have been developed to saturate your pics with that old school, retro feel.

Seeing these slides, though, you can really feel how our user-​​friendly digital retro­spectives can’t yet match the lovely feel of the real thing.

Not sure exactly who the subjects are and exactly which motor­s­ports seasons we’re looking at here: perhaps you can help?

Strange Fruit

Monday, January 16th, 2012

All images Emile Kozak

Emile Kozac is a prolific creative type.

He photo­graphs strange, absences, landscapes where the captured flies fleet­ingly by and then disap­pears. He documents normal things that through the lens become strange, even extraordinary.

he Barcena based Dane also creates amazing graphic work, identities, corporate logis and typography — all shot through with this same minim­alist edge that beguiles and intrigues.

Here is a little selection of Emile’s work that has, almost by accident, the road into it.

Bravo Emile. Keep up the good stuff…

Utility Love

Monday, December 5th, 2011

all images © Jonathan Levitt

We’ve been trying to define what we love about Jonathan Levitt’s blog, Grass Doe.

Grass Doe is a collection of the Maine photographer’s images, updated regularly.

There are beautiful images of snowbound wolves, bucolic riverine moments and delectable slant-​​lit plates of food fit for the most cultured of woodsmen.

There are amazingly textured rock forma­tions, woods full of turning leaves and silent pathways that hint of isolated adventure.

But among these immacu­lately presented inter­pret­a­tions of nature’s wonders is sprinkled the occasional great shot of cars and bikes; more often than not of the supremely utilit­arian kind.

It makes sense to us. After all vehicles are essen­tially magic carpets through which you exper­ience the world in all its wonder. At least if you allow them to be.

Something about the way the cars and bikes are repres­ented here foregrounds that aspect of car culture, and it chimes deeply somewhere within us.

Do yourself a favour and bookmark Jonathan’s sites.

Influx Street Spots

Monday, November 28th, 2011


Images © michael fordham

Time and time again we come across inter­esting cars and bikes and people on our travels of this and other lands.

Now we thought it was about time that we share with you what we find.

Go to our new Street Spots site, follow us and enjoy the lovely bits of automotive serendipity we come across (almost) every day.

We’ve been getting twitchy with our camera phones, and, in fact are more or less reverting to that pre-​​teen car spotter we used to be.

If you like you can join the Tumblr network and share your own street spots, or, for that matter repost ours. Social blogging. It’s the new black, obvs.

Anyway, we hope you enjoy the subtleties of the stuff we find on our daily travels.

Tell all your friends!

http://influxstreetspots.tumblr.com/

Southsiders at Goodwood

Monday, October 31st, 2011


images: Southsiders

We might be a bit slow off the mark here, but this morning we stumbled across some of the nicest pictures we’ve ever seen coming from the Goodwood revival.

The images come from those fine folks at Southsiders MC, whose blog is on our regular roster of daily browses.

Every year the event is one of the most photo­graphed on the calender and is getting bigger every year.

This set is a testament to the worth of the slow, delib­erate process of larger format film photography.

Bravo Southsiders.

See the full set here.

John Rawlings

Tuesday, October 11th, 2011

All images © John Rawlings/​Condé Naste

Photographer John Rawlings was one of a pod of key creative photo­graphers employed by publishing house Condé Naste in the fifties.

Along with luminaries like Irving Penn, to create in the pages of Vogue and other titles the chrome clad version of the American dream.

In a way these images are the photo­graphic equivalent of the artwork of Art Fitzpatrick, who we have inter­viewed here.

In Rawlings work the link between the design of the behemoth cruisers and the broader world of fashion reaches its ultimate expression.

You can feel the affluence of a very specific time and a place in these images, and the idealised version of American womanhood (as possession as much as the car) that they represented.

Amazing too when you consider how beauty and fashion is still used to sell the dream of an automobile — albeit in a huge variety of ways — fifty years on.

Ray Gordon - Throttled

Friday, October 7th, 2011

We really like Ray Gordon’s pictures. There’s something funda­mentally upbeat about them. They’re real. They’re cool. They’re unselfconscious.

Living tucked up in the offbeat Pacific Northwest of America, Ray has been documenting the lives of his local petrol­headed friends for a while now, as well as travelling around the country shooting all sorts of editorial and commercial work.

The car and bike culture material came together a few months back in his Portland exhib­ition Throttled.

We spoke to Ray about the work and what motivates him.

Influx: Throttled: how did the project come to be?
Ray Gordon: I have been a photo­grapher for 20 plus years and my hobby has been hot rods and motor­cycles my whole life. It was about time the two crashed into each other.

IN: V8 or V Twin?
RG: I am defin­itely a V8 guy and a British twin guy. I love cool old V twin choppers but what the V twin guys have morphed into over the years is not my thing. They seem all all be skaters or ortho­dontists. So weird.

IN: Why potography?
RG: I chose photo­graphy as a career because I suck at making music. Being a photo­grapher is the second coolest job in the world. Rock Star being the first.

IN: Why Portland?
RG: Portland is the best place in the US. A perfect mix of rednecks and liberal arty folks. I love it when they mate. Real estate is still relat­ively cheap, too, so I can fly off to LA or NY and work but then come back to Portland and my money goes further. This means I can buy 12 beers instead of six.

IN: What car/​bike do you drive?
RG: I have a 1951 Chevy Business Coupe Gasser being built by Cody at Hurst Racing Tires and a Hard Tailed late 60’s BSA Chop that Thor at See See Motorcycles is building. It sucks having 2 builds going on at once. At the moment I own large piles of really cool stuff that just isn’t on the road yet. But next summer look out!

IN What’s next?
RG:Raising my family and continuing to life my life and watch the photos make themselves.

www.raygordon.com