Friday, March 27, 2009

Week 3-Thing #5


I have an interest in home recording so I search Home Studio. The most of the pictures are from photographers, on a photo site, who new? There were quite a few audio studios from the seemingly cluttered-yet organized Estudio Casiero, to the austere Home Studio by ashergrey, from pod-casters, to analog synthesizer fanatics, to acoustic lovers. These are just some notes on ones that I thought were interesting


The ones that are set up by guitarists always have their guitars lined up as if they were the band, each in it’s own pose, like in Home studio by agatzeblues

This guy, Home Studio Pt 2 by anatomyofneed, has synthesizers stack on top of each other

Here’s one, small home studio by zero.the.hero, with just a computer and some monitors—where the home studio is likely to head. He also has a simpsonized avatar.

This one was a photo studio, but it had a guitar in the corner-sort of a hybrid I suppose.

Home Studio III by guirlanda. Has a lot of toys in it which is cool, as it is either a kid or a kid at heart.

This one is just funny, Anatomy of a Home Studio by bigsnit, it has a $8.00 laundry hamper juxtaposed with a $2000 studio mic, and a cat and a ‘casting couch’.

Also humorous, was this one titled “You know your home studio is reaching critical mass when...” and the tagline “These cables have something to do with the studio, but if any one of them is unplugged the television switches off.”

Of course there is a never-ending list (54,000+) many of which don’t have anything to do with home recording, or photography such as Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio by Faby Manzi. It says that this house was the first in America to have a family room and closets. And appearantly there are more than one on flickr, Frank Lloyd Wright Home & Studio by Adam Preble, and this one, Frank Lloyd Wright's home and studio, Oak Park, Illinois by MF*****Fotos, so I am beginning to believe this was an assignment for some students. Just as anyone who looked up ‘library’ might begin to think-what’s with all this web 2.0?

Besides, I liked the photos of the Dow studio better.

1 comment:

  1. How do you think that you could use flickr in a lesson? There is a mashup called Flickrstorm that allows you to create groups of photos for students to use that you know are appropriate and have creative commons or fair use permissions. There is a great teachertube video on it called Using FlickrStorm.

    Ann

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