Posts Tagged ‘magic’

Photo Friday – The Fairy Mill. The woods are alive with magic.

Friday, September 25th, 2009

The Fairy MillI thought that this week I’d skip ahead a bit and write about one of my more recent images ‘The Fairy Mill’. But to do so I have to go back a bit first.

About five years ago, I found out about a group called the National Association of Photoshop Professionals or NAPP. They were responsible for publishing the ‘Photoshop User’ magazine. I had received a sample magazine and found it very educational. The tutorials and ‘how to’s’ were really well put togethre, so I decided to join up.

The magazine and online video tutorials were fantastic and I learned a lot quickly, but the best part of the membership was the community forums. It didn’t matter how stupid a question may seem, there was always someone who could help out without calling you and idiot for asking (unlike some other forums I had visited.)

One of the cool things the forum moderators started up was a weekly Photoshop battle. Each week, one of the moderators would post an image from the Stock Xchang website and it was our mission to create something special out of it. Sometimes there were strict guidelines to try and follow but mainly it was freeform. No prizes, no winners or losers, just a desire from all who participated to create the best work they could. It was a lot of fun, and pushed all of us creatively.

Over the years, life got busier and busier and I found little time to be a part of the community but always stayed a member and dropped by from time to time to see what was going on. A few weeks ago when I dropped in, I saw a battle image that just called out to me. I couldn’t resist, I had to do it.

I downloaded the image of the forest and started to work on it. I knew I needed a fairy to put in it so I began scouring another website, Deviant Art, for a stock image I could use. After searching through hundreds of shots, I found it. A stunning girl, posed in a light, summery, turquoise dress provided by Ranger Cookies Stock. I started putting the image together.

I have always had a love and fascination of the mystical and enchanted. Faeries, goblins, trolls, pixies and enchanted, magical forests. I love finding real locations that could be magical forests and photographing them to composite in the magical creatures. I’m even developing a children’s TV show that is set in an enchanted forest. It’s something that always brings me back to my childhood, how I used to have adventures running around, exploring the countryside in England.

I composited the image together, hand painting many of the lights and fairy dust elements. I played with the idea of putting a second fairy sitting on the mossy rock but it all started to look a little too cluttered. I finished it off and uploaded it to the forum. It felt good to be doing this again after so long away. I think I’ll have to do more again soon.

I thought the image turned out pretty good but I couldn’t help but feel that it was a shame it was made out of stock images rather than ones I had taken myself. I have hundreds of great landscape shots that would work perfectly for this type of image but I’ve never really gotten into photographing people. Maybe I’ll have to try doing a proper studio shoot with a model sometime.

If you or somebody you know feels like being turned into a mythical creature, please get in touch and we’ll organise a photo shoot. You can purchase prints of The Fairy Mill as well as other artwork I have created at RedBubble.com.

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The EVIL within the Victorian Police Force

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

Victorian Police Logo The EVIL within the Victorian Police Force

I’m sure there are many images that go through your mind when I say I have uncovered an evil within the Victorian Police Force. Brutality, corruption, speeding fines… But what if I told you I had uncovered a real evil within the force. One that’s been sitting there in plain sight for all to see since 1947. They say the best place to hide something is right in front of your face. Well that’s exactly what the police force have done with their logo. The five pointed star, sitting on the wreath wearing the crown, with a cross in the middle. Can you see it yet?

Let’s take a look at the star for a moment. The more common name for a five pointed star is a pentagram, which comes from the Greek word pentagrammon, which, roughly translated, means “five-lined” or “five lines”. The pentagram has a long history with symbology that can be traced back as far as 3000BC to Mesopotamian writings where it was used as pictograms meaning corner or angle or nook among other similar things.

To the Babylonian’s, the edges of the pentagram possibly related to the directions forward, back, left, right, and above, which had an astrological meaning, representing the five planets Jupiter, Mercury, Mars and Saturn, and Venus as Ishtar, the Queen of Heaven above.

Later The Pythagoreans believed there was a mathematical perfection to the pentagram and used the five vertices to represent the five old world elements, earth, water, air, fire and the divine.

It wasn’t, however, until the Europeans got hold of the pentagram that it became a magical symbol. They kept the attributes of the five elements that the Pythagoreans had used, but also developed a belief around the orientation of the star. With a single point upwards it depicted spirit presiding over the four elements of matter, and was essentially good. However, whenever the symbol appeared the other way up, it became evil.

Alphonse Louis, who, literally wrote the book on magic in the 1800’s, claimed a reversed pentagram, with two points projecting upwards, “is a symbol of evil and attracts sinister forces because it overturns the proper order of things and demonstrates the triumph of matter over spirit.”

The pentagram has since gone on to be incorporated into a great many other cultures and religions including Taoism, Mormonism, Judaism, Christianity, Neopaganism and Satanism. If you believe that symbols can have power, then the pentagram is a very powerful one indeed. Today, many people commonly recognise it as an occult symbol with both positive and negative connotations.

I can’t believe that such a prolific symbol would be used as a logo, without knowledge of its history or representation. Does this then mean that the Victorian Police are well aware that their symbol is that of evil? Or are they blissfully oblivious of the image they are portraying. If symbolism really does have power, then this could explain a lot about the negative perception we have of our police today. Maybe all they need to do to gain a better image is to turn the pentagram upwards and we would respect them a little more.

However, I can’t help but ponder the comment “overturns the proper order of things” and think of how that relates to the police in todays society… But that’s a thought  for another day…

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