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A photographic study in three registers — flesh, blur, bone. A body caught between movement and stillness, holding the object that will outlast it. Each exposure becomes a threshold — what light reveals, time erases. | A skull — the last archive of form, bone flickering between being and unbeing. One last breath of shape, then the drift — blur, fracture, return
Editing pictures with image manipulation software or a mobile app is not unheard of. An alienation of photos by needle and thread, on the other hand, is an intricate process. Los Angeles-based artist and photographer Diane Meyer has gained instant fame for her embroidered analog photos. In this interview, she talks about adding a new dimension to pictures as well as her source of inspiration and other projects.
I haven't used my Praktica L2 for some time now. The camera has now accompanied me for the last eight days on my bike trips, town walks, watching clouds and visiting my son in Mainz. Instead of the original Jena Tessar lenses I mounted my Helios 44. Semi stand development in Rodinal at 21° for 1 hr.
Tried out one of my Konica Pop (in Blue) walking around Tring and Marsworth, dodging rainshowers. Film brought from Poundland at £1 a roll for 24 shots.