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Recent Comments

Thumbs up Walker Evans! Sorry Diane Arbus!
David Day said: This sounds crazy but fascinating. I cannot see how it could take the emotional subject matter of ... [More]

Thumbs up Walker Evans! Sorry Diane Arbus!
richard gordon said: Given the rising admission costs for first tier museums, how about we just send in robots programmed... [More]

Photographs From the Ongoing Turmoil in Greece
bob said: Thanks for sharing this coverage with us. Kudos to you [More]

Photographer Helen Levitt dies at 95
richard gordon said: In 1966 I began to look at and buy photo books. The first two I bought were A Dialogue With Solitude... [More]

Did You Save Those 3D Glasses for Creature from the Black Lagoon?
Frank Ward said: Hi Melanie, I really enjoyed digging out my 3D glasses for a mano-e-mano with the mummy. There are a... [More]

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BLOG

Clothes as Camera

posted on June 24, 2009 at 10:33 AM MT, by Bob

Using technology recently developed for electronic textiles, researchers at MIT have developed a fabric camera made from polymer fibers. The potential applications are difficult to predict -- the advance of these type of high-tech fiber technologies will radically transform the integration of new technologies into our everyday lives, making processes like monitoring vital signs, air quality and even collecting visual information an invisible function of the clothes we wear.

integrate eight semiconducting light sensors into a polymer cylinder with a diameter of 25 millimeters. controlling the sensor's spacing and angle within the fiber. Once the sensors, made of a type of semiconducting glass, were in position, the polymer cylinder was heated and then stretched so that the diameter shrank the diameter of hundreds of micrometers--a process that is identical to the way in which commercial fiber is made for telecommunication applications--retaining the orientation of the sensors.

Read more on Technology Review, published by MIT.

Related Categories: Scientific Photography,
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Army Medical Archive on Flickr

posted on March 18, 2009 at 4:53 PM MT, by Bob

An Army archivist is undertaking a massive project to digitize and make public a unique collection of rare and sometimes startling military medical images, from the Civil War to Vietnam.

This previously unreported archive at the Army-run National Museum of Health and Medicine in Washington, D.C., contains 500,000 scans of unique images so far, with another 225,000 set to be digitized this year.

Mike Rhode, the museum's head archivist, is working to make tens of thousands of those images, which have been buried in the museum's archive, available on Flickr. Working after hours, his team has posted a curated selection of almost 800 photos on the service already.

Read more on Wired Science.


Entropion and trichiasis secondary to trachoma. Trachoma stage IV. Conjunctivitis, keratitis. Duration: unknown. World War 2. 20th General Hospital. Surgical steps for treatment of entropion and trichiasis.

Related Categories: Scientific Photography,Wired Science,
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What Stanford Wanted to Know and the Museums Don't Get

posted on March 16, 2009 at 11:06 AM MT, by Bob


Eadweard Muybridge, Dread the Dog

cigarettesandpurity.com linked last week to an article about the how experts-- for example, museum prepators and taxidermists-- often mess up quadrupedal gait:

They [a team of biological physicists] randomly gathered a representative sampling of 307 depictions of quadrupeds walking in museum exhibits, taxidermy catalogues, animal-anatomy books and toys. The result?

Museums screwed things up a stunning 41% of the time. Taxidermy catalogues got it wrong 43% of the time, toys 50% of the time, and animal-anatomy catalogues were the worst, with 63.6% errors.

The article sites how the Eadweard Muybridge studies and the simple observation of your neighborhood mongrel can help prevent these professionals from making such a mistake.

Read more at Collision Detection.

Related Categories: Scientific Photography,
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Did You Save Those 3D Glasses for Creature from the Black Lagoon?

posted on March 11, 2009 at 10:25 AM MT, by Melanie McWhorter

Have lots of slightly macabre fun with the new website for the Iceman mummy. The website offers 12 different angle-shots, zoom function to view the body and the numerous tattoos up close. And possibly the best function of the website -- provided you can acquire a pair of anaglyph glasses (cyan and red) -- is the mummified remains in 3D.


copyright South Tyrol Museum of Archeology/EURAC/Marco Samadelli-Gregor Staschitz

Related Categories: Scientific Photography
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We Are Not Alone

posted on November 13, 2008 at 7:32 PM MT, by Rixon Reed


A trio of planets (faint dots indicated with arrows) orbits the young, massive star HR 8799, some 130 light-years from Earth. Discovered using the Hawaii Keck telescope.
Credit: Marois, National Research Council/Canada, Keck

The announcement of the Hubble Space Telescope discovery.

Today is yet another historic day for our civilization and a milestone for the photographic medium. For the first time we can view a photograph of another planet orbiting a sun outside of our own solar system. These planets--known in the scientific world as extrasolar planets--have, during the last decade, been deduced to exist. Their orbits create a wobble and/or a change in brightness in the stars that they circle, and that minute change can be detected by ultra-sensitive scientific instruments. Over 300 of these extrasolar planets have been deduced to exist over the past decade.

However until today's announcement, no one has been able to show proof in the form of a photograph. Once again the power of the medium that we use to explore life on earth has been used to further our knowledge of our place in the universe. After all, until something can be seen to exist in a photograph, it's hard for many to imagine that it truly exists.

Today's announcement was made even more spectacular and incredible in that two independent research teams provided photographs of two different extrasolar planetary systems, proving that the scientific community has a huge competitive drive!

The official Hubble webcast of the announcement.

Read the news of both discoveries:

Sciencenews.org

Scientific America

The New York Times

Related Categories: Scientific Photography
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