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zinedine2300 · 3 years
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Ya se acerca el final de 2017 y el comienzo de 2018…
Esta es la gráfica que ha preparado Jennifer para comunicarnos que continuara en el estudio Moustache formándose y aportando frescura como diseñadora Junior durante 2018.
Aprovechamos esta potente y fresca gráfica de Jennifer para trasmitiros también la energía creativa que se respira en nuestro estudio de cara a este 2018. Tenemos proyectos nuevos e innovadores que os sorprenderán, creatividades que cuenta historias increíbles y diseños impactantes que las comunican con honestidad. Pero sin duda lo mejor que os podemos ofrecer en Lady Moustache Comunicación este 2018 son esas inmensas ganas e ilusión que pone todo nuestro equipo en dar forma a vuestras historias.
¡A POR 2018!!!! ¡CONTINUAMOS!!!!!!!
 Mas sobre nuestras #LittleBrandStories en  www.ladymoustache.es
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barbarapicci · 7 years
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(via Lisbon day-by-day - Itinerari alternativi [Street art: Village Underground Lisboa & LX Factory] (Day 3)) 
Cosa troverete: un autobus parcheggiato su vecchi container; un’aquila in business class; terrazze fighette ricavate da magazzini in rianimazione; Adami che vengono tentati da altri Adami; tizi improvvisati che intonano concerti “saudadici”; vicoletti ristretti dai torbidi incontri e riscontri; artisti che partecipano al gran premio “Bagno più cool”; blogger che si fanno intervistare da altre blogger sullo sfondo di (grandi) passioni in comune; asinelli in castigo & more… 
Clicca per vedere video & gallery: https://barbarapicci.com/2017/08/17/lisbon-day-by-day-3-streetart/
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gerodbr · 7 years
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Step1 It's alive #pamplona #navarra #graffiti #dbr #dbrcrew #frankenstein #boriskarloff #genewilder #gero #jero #jerk #character #sketch #light #cachopo #villava #atarrabia
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runswith · 5 years
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Travel diary:  Pamplona.  Entry 5 – March 13, 2002
The dessert course appeared as soon as Curtis ditched the joint. Two courses: a big basket of walnuts and a plate holding alternating slices of cheese and something Marco and Jim thought might be conserve or preserve of quince, which grows wild in the mountains locally. The walnuts: not the large, perfect specimens one sees in a supermarket -- Marco thought they might have been grown at this farm. As we dug into them (the management thoughtfully provided a nutcracker, Jim and I immediately struggled over it), I discovered that the more I ate, the more delicious they became. We hoovered them up, leaving the table strewn with mounds of broken shells.
Between the four of us, we’d gone through a pile of food. The bill amounted to 100 euros, dirt cheap considering all the entertainment that came with the package. Coffee didn’t seem to be available, however --- astonishing, that, considering the way Spaniards normally toss down espresso. We decided to find another site for after-dinner caffeine, Jim saying it needed to be a place that also had cigars (called “puros” here).
We paid up, had a few last words with the proprietor. When we stepped outside the day had become, if anything, grayer, damper, the air more cool and tangy.
Jim pulled the Fiat into the parking lot of a restaurant by the highway, we wandered inside to the small bar area where coffee and Jim’s cigar awaited. As we stood around, sipping espresso, Marco noticed a wooden display case positioned atop a refrigerator that sat by the wall to one side of the bar. Containing arty postcards, all shots of local, rustic scenes, including a particular one that caught his eye, a picture of a hefty guy lifting a large, heavy, square object, apparently as part of a traditional competition, the way Scots fairs have the log throwing thingy. He reached to pick that card out, and with his touch the display shelf fell behind the refrigerator, producing jarringly loud clatter. All action in the bar stopped, all eyes turned to Marco. Curtis and I quietly disassociated ourselves from anything but innocent, unobtrusive coffee sipping. Marco and Jim got the display shelf back up on top of the refrigerator, collected the postcards, put them all back in the display. Except for the one card Marco wanted --- there had only been one of its kind --- which had slipped under the refrigerator, out of reach.
Back in Pamplona, Marco and Jim dropped me and Curtis off where they’d picked us up, way the hell across town from where I was staying, though not far from Curtis’ place. Great for him, as he wanted to take a nap. I wanted to hit an internet joint I’d found the night before, so grabbed a taxi.
A local quirk: for some reason, you can’t hail a taxi on the street in Pamplona. You have to go to a taxi stand, which means you have to know where they’re located, information a furriner might not have. Curtis pointed out a stand, in a driveway in front of a hospital. Without that help, I might have been up the proverbial creek.
I spent a good long time at the internet joint, during which a loud, insistent political demonstration started up, began making its slow way through the local streets. Curtis and I had come across another one the night before, that one looking like a large squad of cheerleaders, done cheerfully up in clown wigs, doing moves to something they chanted I couldn’t understand. The kids were high school age, so the cheerleader thing seemed like a possibility. Curtis disagreed, looking a bit intense, we let it go at that.
The Saturday night demonstration: larger, very different, consisting of two long columns of kids -- again, high-school age -- done up in traditional folk outfits of some kind including, for many of them, two long bells tied around them so that the bells hung out from their backs, like long, rigid, brass breasts. The kids moved in a slow, trotting cadence that rang the bells loudly in a pronounced rhythm, punctuated by chanting I couldn’t make out and horns that other kids blew. This was all done by teenagers, no grown-ups involved. In fact, the grown-ups I saw seemed to purposely keep their distance, mostly looking anything but amused. There was something oddly aggressive about the demonstration, and I made my way quickly by, glad to be past it and off into other, quieter streets.
The point of these demonstrations, I was later told, was support of ETA, and in particular the pushing of a particular cause: the return of imprisoned members of ETA to Navarra, so that they could serve out their sentences there. It’s apparently being promoted as a humanitarian idea -- i.e., so families could visit more easily -- that would also be a blow against the Spanish government’s “repression” of ETA “freedom fighters.” (Why the quotation marks? Because the whole thing has the distinct feel of what I can only describe as extremely partisan propaganda.) The members of ETA who are in prison are generally there for assassinations or bombings, or for activities in support of same, and the atmosphere that I encountered in Pamplona around all this felt intensely charged and unsafe. Apparently, it’s not considered wise there to express one’s sentiments if one does not support ETA as it can result in violence and intimidation. Or so I’m told.
Pro-ETA graffiti/posters/handbills were ubiquitous in the old part of the city, some bars had pro-ETA literature and posters prominently displayed. In talking with Curtis about all this, he clearly seemed to tap into deep emotions of anger and frustration. The same seems true of most Spaniards I’ve heard talk about it. I can only listen and watch, thinking of the long years of IRA/UDA violence in Northern Ireland (my father’s side of the family all having come from the south of that green island) and the pointlessness of it all.
I don’t know what I expected to find in Pamplona, but it wasn’t such a sharp sense of danger and paranoia. The juxtaposition of that over a beautiful, lively city, abundant with blossom-covered cherry and almond trees, felt a little unreal.
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antoniofse · 8 years
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Women power #Pamplona #Iruña #Navarra #art #artwork #graffiti #graffitiigers #graffitiporn #instagood #instagraff #instagraffiti #instagrafite #mural #pasteup #photooftheday #sprayart #stencil #stencilart #stickerart #street #streetart #streetarteverywhere #streetartistry #streetphotography #urban #urbanart #urbanwalls #wall #wallporn (en Pamplona Centro Histórico)
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yidneth · 7 years
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I love ruins, I find them so utterly romantic and ghostly. (Please go on reading bit of a rant) I visit these often when walking, sadly in the inside there are paintings and graffittis spoiling the haunting timeless mood. I am not always against graffiti and urban art, but when it comes to vintage abandoned villages it is a "no". Respect the story that they tell. The feelings they evoke. Do not paint on old buildings as you should not carve letters in old trees.. do yo agree? #ruins #ruinas #abandonado #itsabandoned #snow #winter #navarragrafías #igersspain #abode #haunted #winterscape #stroll #respect (at Guenduláin, Navarra, Spain)
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iammorte · 7 years
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#pamplona #navarra #estaes_navarra #estaes_pamplona #igersnavarra #igerspamplona #streetart #grafitti #graffiti #iphone6s #iphonesia #iphoneonly #iphoneography #iphonephotography #minimal #minimalism #art #arte #urbanart #arteurbano #photooftheday #picoftheday #nofilter #sinfiltros #cinema #movies #cine #pelicula #homealone #joepesci #danielstern #macaulayculkin
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narcisbolgor-blog · 6 years
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Facebook Stories adds funky AR drawing and Instagrams Boomerang
You’ll soon be able to draw on the world around you and shoot back-and-forth Instagram Boomerang GIFs with the Facebook Camera. Bringing additional creative tools to the Facebook Camera could make it a more popular place to shoot content and help the company compete with Snapchat.
“We wanted to give people an easy way to create with augmented reality and draw in the world around them” says John Barnett, a Facebook Camera Product Manager about the feature it calls “3D drawing”. It’s rolling out to users over the coming weeks. Matt Navarra first spotted the features.
youtube
With AR drawing, you can scribble on the world around you, then move your camera and see the markings stay in place. It’s a fun way to add graffiti that only exists inside your screen. You can add the drawings before or while you’re recording, allowing you to draw on something out of frame, then pan or unzoom to reveal it. Facebook will eventually add more brushes beyond the pastel gradient colors seen here.
Facebook tells me the technology understands the corners and objects in the room to create a 3D spec. Facebook could that use that to detect surfaces like walls and tables to wrap the drawing onto them. Currently, it only does that when it’s confident about the object recognition, such as in optimal light conditions.
Since drawing is a universal language, the feature could make AR easy to use for younger users and Internet novices. Facebook launched its AR effects at F8 last April, and has recently added AR tracker target experiences that are triggered by real-world posters or QR codes. It all started with the company acquiring fledgling AR masks startup MSQRD in 2016.
youtube
Facebook added looping GIF creation to the Facebook Camera a year ago, but those can feel a bit jarring since they start back at the beginning once they end. Some users no longer have that GIF option, so it’s potentially being replaced by Boomerang’s established brand and more silky back-and-forth animated video clips. Facebook confirms that this feature is now rolling out to the Facebook Camera.
As we reported last week, Facebook is determined to make Stories work. Despite the criticism of it being a rip-off of Snapchat and redundant given Instagram Stories, Facebook is trying new ways to make Stories more popular an accessible. That includes tests of Stories as the default destination for content shot with the Facebook Camera, showing bigger tiles with previews of Stories atop the News Feed, and showing a camera and camera roll preview window when you open the status composer. Those, combined with these new features, could give Facebook Stories a boost in utility and visibility.
Facebook believes social media is on an inevitable journey from text to photos to videos to Stories equipped with augmented reality. Since Snapchat refused its acquisition offers, Facebook is now on a quest to evolve into an AR company rather than having to buy a big one. It remains to be seen whether users think AR is a novelty or a core utility, but Facebook won’t wait to find out.
3 tests show Facebook is determined to make Stories the default
Instagram will let you download your content after criticism about portability
More From this publisher : HERE ; This post was curated using : TrendingTraffic
=> *********************************************** Post Source Here: Facebook Stories adds funky AR drawing and Instagrams Boomerang ************************************ =>
Facebook Stories adds funky AR drawing and Instagrams Boomerang was originally posted by 11 VA Viral News
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localbizlift · 6 years
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Facebook Stories adds funky AR drawing and Instagram’s Boomerang
You’ll soon be able to draw on the world around you and shoot back-and-forth Instagram Boomerang GIFs with the Facebook Camera. Bringing additional creative tools to the Facebook Camera could make it a more popular place to shoot content and help the company compete with Snapchat.
“We wanted to give people an easy way to create with augmented reality and draw in the world around them” says John Barnett, a Facebook Camera Product Manager about the feature it calls “3D drawing”. It’s rolling out to users over the coming weeks. Matt Navarra first spotted the features.
youtube
With AR drawing, you can scribble on the world around you, then move your camera and see the markings stay in place. It’s a fun way to add graffiti that only exists inside your screen. You can add the drawings before or while you’re recording, allowing you to draw on something out of frame, then pan or unzoom to reveal it. Facebook will eventually add more brushes beyond the pastel gradient colors seen here.
Facebook tells me the technology understands the corners and objects in the room to create a 3D spec. Facebook could that use that to detect surfaces like walls and tables to wrap the drawing onto them. Currently, it only does that when it’s confident about the object recognition, such as in optimal light conditions.
Since drawing is a universal language, the feature could make AR easy to use for younger users and Internet novices. Facebook launched its AR effects at F8 last April, and has recently added AR tracker target experiences that are triggered by real-world posters or QR codes. It all started with the company acquiring fledgling AR masks startup MSQRD in 2016.
youtube
Facebook added looping GIF creation to the Facebook Camera a year ago, but those can feel a bit jarring since they start back at the beginning once they end. Some users no longer have that GIF option, so it’s potentially being replaced by Boomerang’s established brand and more silky back-and-forth animated video clips. Facebook confirms that this feature is now rolling out to the Facebook Camera.
As we reported last week, Facebook is determined to make Stories work. Despite the criticism of it being a rip-off of Snapchat and redundant given Instagram Stories, Facebook is trying new ways to make Stories more popular an accessible. That includes tests of Stories as the default destination for content shot with the Facebook Camera, showing bigger tiles with previews of Stories atop the News Feed, and showing a camera and camera roll preview window when you open the status composer. Those, combined with these new features, could give Facebook Stories a boost in utility and visibility.
Facebook believes social media is on an inevitable journey from text to photos to videos to Stories equipped with augmented reality. Since Snapchat refused its acquisition offers, Facebook is now on a quest to evolve into an AR company rather than having to buy a big one. It remains to be seen whether users think AR is a novelty or a core utility, but Facebook won’t wait to find out.
3 tests show Facebook is determined to make Stories the default
Instagram will let you download your content after criticism about portability
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pmsocialmedia · 6 years
Text
Facebook Stories adds funky AR drawing and Instagram’s Boomerang
You’ll soon be able to draw on the world around you and shoot back-and-forth Instagram Boomerang GIFs with the Facebook Camera. Bringing additional creative tools to the Facebook Camera could make it a more popular place to shoot content and help the company compete with Snapchat.
“We wanted to give people an easy way to create with augmented reality and draw in the world around them” says John Barnett, a Facebook Camera Product Manager about the feature it calls “3D drawing”. It’s rolling out to users over the coming weeks. Matt Navarra first spotted the features.
youtube
With AR drawing, you can scribble on the world around you, then move your camera and see the markings stay in place. It’s a fun way to add graffiti that only exists inside your screen. You can add the drawings before or while you’re recording, allowing you to draw on something out of frame, then pan or unzoom to reveal it. Facebook will eventually add more brushes beyond the pastel gradient colors seen here.
Facebook tells me the technology understands the corners and objects in the room to create a 3D spec. Facebook could that use that to detect surfaces like walls and tables to wrap the drawing onto them. Currently, it only does that when it’s confident about the object recognition, such as in optimal light conditions.
Since drawing is a universal language, the feature could make AR easy to use for younger users and Internet novices. Facebook launched its AR effects at F8 last April, and has recently added AR tracker target experiences that are triggered by real-world posters or QR codes. It all started with the company acquiring fledgling AR masks startup MSQRD in 2016.
youtube
Facebook added looping GIF creation to the Facebook Camera a year ago, but those can feel a bit jarring since they start back at the beginning once they end. Some users no longer have that GIF option, so it’s potentially being replaced by Boomerang’s established brand and more silky back-and-forth animated video clips. Facebook confirms that this feature is now rolling out to the Facebook Camera.
As we reported last week, Facebook is determined to make Stories work. Despite the criticism of it being a rip-off of Snapchat and redundant given Instagram Stories, Facebook is trying new ways to make Stories more popular an accessible. That includes tests of Stories as the default destination for content shot with the Facebook Camera, showing bigger tiles with previews of Stories atop the News Feed, and showing a camera and camera roll preview window when you open the status composer. Those, combined with these new features, could give Facebook Stories a boost in utility and visibility.
Facebook believes social media is on an inevitable journey from text to photos to videos to Stories equipped with augmented reality. Since Snapchat refused its acquisition offers, Facebook is now on a quest to evolve into an AR company rather than having to buy a big one. It remains to be seen whether users think AR is a novelty or a core utility, but Facebook won’t wait to find out.
3 tests show Facebook is determined to make Stories the default
Instagram will let you download your content after criticism about portability
via Social – TechCrunch https://ift.tt/2JFKqpj
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workfromhom · 6 years
Text
Facebook Stories adds funky AR drawing and Instagram’s Boomerang
You’ll soon be able to draw on the world around you and shoot back-and-forth Instagram Boomerang GIFs with the Facebook Camera. Bringing additional creative tools to the Facebook Camera could make it a more popular place to shoot content and help the company compete with Snapchat.
“We wanted to give people an easy way to create with augmented reality and draw in the world around them” says John Barnett, a Facebook Camera Product Manager about the feature it calls “3D drawing”. It’s rolling out to users over the coming weeks. Matt Navarra first spotted the features, and provided a copy of the video at the bottom of this post.
youtube
With AR drawing, you can scribble on the world around you, then move your camera and see the markings stay in place. It’s a fun way to add graffiti that only exists inside your screen. You can add the drawings before or while you’re recording, allowing you to draw on something out of frame, then pan or unzoom to reveal it. Facebook will eventually add more brushes beyond the pastel gradient colors seen here.
Facebook tells me the technology understands the corners and objects in the room to create a 3D spec. Facebook could that use that to detect surfaces like walls and tables to wrap the drawing onto them. Currently, it only does that when it’s confident about the object recognition, such as in optimal light conditions.
Since drawing is a universal language, the feature could make AR easy to use for younger users and Internet novices. Facebook launched its AR effects at F8 last April, and has recently added AR tracker target experiences that are triggered by real-world posters or QR codes. It all started with the company acquiring fledgling AR masks startup MSQRD in 2016.
youtube
Facebook added looping GIF creation to the Facebook Camera a year ago, but those can feel a bit jarring since they start back at the beginning once they end. Some users no longer have that GIF option, so it’s potentially being replaced by Boomerang’s established brand and more silky back-and-forth animated video clips. Facebook confirms that this feature is now rolling out to the Facebook Camera.
As we reported last week, Facebook is determined to make Stories work. Despite the criticism of it being a rip-off of Snapchat and redundant given Instagram Stories, Facebook is trying new ways to make Stories more popular an accessible. That includes tests of making Stories the default destination for content shot with the Facebook Camera, showing bigger tiles with previews of Stories atop the News Feed, and showing a camera and camera roll preview window when you open the status composer. Those, combined with these new features, could give Facebook Stories a boost in utility and visibility.
Facebook believes social media is on an inevitable journey from text to photos to videos to Stories equipped with augmented reality. Since Snapchat refused its acquisition offers, Facebook is now on a quest to evolve into an AR company rather than having to buy a big one. It remains to be seen whether users think AR is a novelty or a core utility, but Facebook won’t wait to find out.
from Facebook – TechCrunch https://ift.tt/2JFKqpj via IFTTT
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Hoy la #creatividad y #arte desenfrenado llega al estudio Moustache en forma de amor, por supuesto no es la forma en la que imaginábamos nos llegaría el amor... pero bienvenido sea. Gracias Orano, Alaitz, Nando, Ana y también a sus primos… os deseamos mucho amor a todos y feliz viernes.
Os recordamos que si necesitáis una dosis de creatividad controlada y dirigida a campañas de publicidad para vuestro negocio nos podéis encontrar en la Plaza San Nicolás 76 – 4º de la ciudad de Pamplona. Más info sobre nuestras love #LittleBrandStories en - www.ladymoustache.es  
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gerodbr · 7 years
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#dicktracy #graffiti #gero #jero #jerk #dbr #dbrcrew #warrenbeatty #alpacino #madonna #dustinhoffman #dannyelfman #yellow #gangster #squad #flattop #navarra #nafarroa
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barbarapicci · 7 years
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(via Due amiche blogger si incontrano a Lisbona? Scoprite il loro percorso alternativo) Il mio viaggio alternativo a Lisbona raccontato da colei che l'ha reso tale: Liliana Navarra! Clicca per leggere l’articolo e per vedere video e gallery: https://lillyslifestyle.com/2017/08/21/due-amiche-blogger-si-incontrano-a-lisbona-scoprite-il-loro-percorso-alternativo/
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antoniofse · 8 years
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La democracia es una trampa #Pamplona #Navarra #art #artwork #graffiti #graffitiigers #graffitiporn #instagood #instagraff #instagraffiti #instagrafite #mural #pasteup #photooftheday #sprayart #stencil #stencilart #stickerart #street #streetart #streetarteverywhere #streetartistry #streetphotography #urban #urbanart #urbanwalls #wall #wallporn
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