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#Pullover

2 posts2 participants0 posts today

#dwr #foto #fotografieren #mywork #fedibikes #MdRddG #MdRgD #MdRzA #FrostPendeln #obob #frostradeln #fahrrad #FahrradStattPorsche

#TousledCraneonTour

#Welt! Bist du noch da?

Unten am
#Fluss

Während es gestern Morgen doch sehr frisch war, habe ich es genossen, am Abend, in der Sonne am Fluss zu sitzen. So einfach im
#Pullover. War das gut!

Heute ist es wieder kalt mit -3°C, aber was soll’s?

Erst noch einen
#Kaffee, etwas aus der #Mottenkiste und dann rauf auf’s #Rad!

Bruce
#Springsteen - The #River

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lc6F47Z6PI4

Bleibt senkrecht und gesund!

#dwr #fedibikes #MdRddG #MdRzA #FrostPendeln #obob #frostradeln #fahrrad #FahrradStattPorsche

#TousledCraneonTour

#Welt! Bist du noch da?

Unten am #Fluss

Während es gestern Morgen doch sehr frisch war, habe ich es genossen, am Abend, in der Sonne am Fluss zu sitzen. So einfach im #Pullover. War das gut!

Heute ist es wieder kalt mit -3°C, aber was soll’s?

Erst noch einen #Kaffee, etwas aus der #Mottenkiste und dann rauf auf’s #Rad!

Bruce #Springsteen - The #River

youtube.com/watch?v=lc6F47Z6PI

Invisible Jumpers

Photographer Joseph Ford and knitter Nina Dodd have for the last several years worked on their collaborative project called Invisible Jumpers, in which Dodd would knit a garment that blends in with a chosen environment and then Ford would photograph the wearer. The book was published in 2019 ... but the project continues adding animals, arists, musicians to the project. As Ford explains:

"The locations have to be eye-catching but simple enough to be able to be knitted. They also have to be places that aren’t going to change too fast, as the knitting takes a few weeks...

Once I’ve found the location, I photograph someone standing where I would like the model to be in the final picture. I draw over this scouting photograph and annotate the picture with different colors and patterns so Nina can plan how to knit. Often there are 10 or 12 different shades of yarn in a single picture, and up to 24 balls of wool at any one time for the more complicated designs. The choice of yarn has varied according to the background."

Invisible Jumpers

Photographer Joseph Ford and knitter Nina Dodd have for the last several years worked on their collaborative project called Invisible Jumpers, in which Dodd would knit a garment that blends in with a chosen environment and then Ford would photograph the wearer. The book was published in 2019 ... but the project continues adding animals, arists, musicians to the project. As Ford explains:

"The locations have to be eye-catching but simple enough to be able to be knitted. They also have to be places that aren’t going to change too fast, as the knitting takes a few weeks...

Once I’ve found the location, I photograph someone standing where I would like the model to be in the final picture. I draw over this scouting photograph and annotate the picture with different colors and patterns so Nina can plan how to knit. Often there are 10 or 12 different shades of yarn in a single picture, and up to 24 balls of wool at any one time for the more complicated designs. The choice of yarn has varied according to the background."

Invisible Jumpers

Photographer Joseph Ford and knitter Nina Dodd have for the last several years worked on their collaborative project called Invisible Jumpers, in which Dodd would knit a garment that blends in with a chosen environment and then Ford would photograph the wearer. The book was published in 2019 ... but the project continues adding animals, arists, musicians to the project. As Ford explains:

"The locations have to be eye-catching but simple enough to be able to be knitted. They also have to be places that aren’t going to change too fast, as the knitting takes a few weeks...

Once I’ve found the location, I photograph someone standing where I would like the model to be in the final picture. I draw over this scouting photograph and annotate the picture with different colors and patterns so Nina can plan how to knit. Often there are 10 or 12 different shades of yarn in a single picture, and up to 24 balls of wool at any one time for the more complicated designs. The choice of yarn has varied according to the background."