G'day all
Across the country we see many very interesting and some quite technically difficult building murals - how does one do a grain silo 30+ metres / 100+ feet in the air safely and with little or no guidelines to follow? In this small western Victorian town of Balmoral was a beautiful wall mural - maybe 18-20m long x 5-6m high, and I was able to photograph it in some detail to show its construction
1)- the whole building and mural
exif- Panny FZ-300; 1/500s x F4,0; ISO-100; lens at 1x zoom / 30mm FFequiv
2)- a partial of the overall image
exif- Panny FZ-300; 1/320s x F4,0; ISO-100; lens at 3x zoom / 75mm FFequiv
3)- a closeup of part of the previous image
exif- Panny FZ-300; 1/250s x F4,0; ISO-100; lens at 18x zoom / 450mm FFequiv
It appears that the artist/s created their backdrop via hundreds of "paint droppings" at the top creating dozens of vertical dribble-lines - and most of these were overlaying another layer of imagery installed via regular house-paint rollers. Over the top of the 'dribble' later then came other layers of detail, making up the overall - and somewhat amazing- imagery seen above
As always, feedback welcome
Phil
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