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Recently completed

December 3, 2009

mossing_site

Recently completed a website for Adria East Mossing, LLC, a law firm in Chicago.

Adria Mossing was the sort of client you dream about. She chose the mock-up I hoped she would, she gave me complete creative control, and she delivered the content for her site quickly! WOW! I’ll consider myself lucky to ever encounter a client like her again.

It was a fun project to work on for another reason too. I always aim to produce original photographs for a new website, and mossinglaw.com was the first site I did since picking up the Canon 5D. I was so excited that I even rented a few L series lenses for the shoot.

+ www.mossinglaw.com

New York City Streetlamp

August 31, 2009

nyc_streetlight1

nyc_streetlight2

In 2004, an international design competition was launched to create a new standard streetlight for the City of New York. A design by the Office for Visual Interaction (OVI) was selected after a two-stage competition process, and will be added to the city’s existing catalogue of fixtures to light streets, sidewalks, and parks within New York’s five boroughs.

In creating a streetlamp that will surely become a new classic, OVI asked themselves, “What is the light source of the future?” Hi-flux LEDs emerged as an outstanding solution. With their small size, low wattage, intensity, and extremely long life of over 50,000 hours, LEDs are preeminent as an energy efficient, minimal-maintenance source.

Rethinking the aesthetic potential of LED technology was a driving force for the streetlight’s elegant form. In contrast to the bulky cobra-heads associated with high-pressure sodium lamps, the streetlight takes on a slim, elongated profile enabled by the tiny size of its light source, which does not require a hefty decorative enclosure. Instead, the thin arc of the luminaire itself provides the necessary surface area for housing and cooling the LEDs. The revolutionary aesthetic of the streetlight is specifically derived from the requirements and possibilities of LED technology.

Reprinted here from the Office of Visual Interaction website

+ www.oviinc.com