Phone Cases for Sale
We here at Evan Gearing Photography are offering a new product for sale; phone cases! They are an excellent way of protecting your phone as well as showing off a bit of your personality! I think they are well made and the print quality is outstanding! I'm using one myself with my trick roper shot and I am quite happy with it! There are different kinds of cases; there are the traditional kind that cover the phone except for the screen (tough case) and then the kind that have a flap that covers the screen as well (folio case). The cases are just for Samsung and Apple phones. Go to this post for a couple of examples.
I've curated some of the photos on my site that I think would work great for phone cases into a collection that you can see if you click here. I personally think the portrait orientation of a photo goes best with these cases, but the landscape orientation works as well. It mainly comes down to preference. Also, any photo on my site will work if you don't see any in my phone case collection that strikes you. If you find a photo that you like, click on Visit Shop, click on Photo Gifts and then on the bottom left under TYPE, click on Phone Cases.
Use the code PHONECASE2019 for 30% off everything for all of April! The code is good for everything, not just the phone cases, so act now!
Lucent
Today's photo is another from Chicago. This one is from the ground floor of the Hancock building. This chandelier over the reflecting pool is a piece of art called "Lucent" and is supposed to represent different stars and constellations that can be seen from Earth's northern hemisphere. Here is more about Lucent from https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/lucent:
Lucent, the mesmerizing sculpture hanging in the lobby of Chicago’s John Hancock Building, certainly lives up to its name. The title is derived from the Latin word “lucere,” meaning “to shine,” and the artwork’s 3,115 lights depict a scale map of the stars that shine in the night sky.
The 13-foot artwork contains thousands of glass bulbs, all fed light through blue illuminating fiber-optic lines. The sculpture, created by English artist Wolfgang Buttress with the help of astrophysicist Dr. Daniel Bayliss, represents a 3D map of all the stars in the Northern Hemisphere that are able visible with the naked eye.
All of the piece’s glass bulbs were hand blown by artists at a local glass studio. Each one of the more than 3,000 bulbs is amplified even more against a mirrored ceiling above and a reflecting pool below. The end result is a piece that seems to go on forever, light looping from sky to ground over and over again.
The cosmic-inspired sculpture, Buttress told Chicago Magazine, aims to expresses “the idea of looking up and sensing wonder.”
This is another portrait-oriented photo that would be great on a phone case! I hope you enjoy the photo and thanks for dropping by.
Weird Globe ThingThe "Lucent" art piece in the lobby of the Hancock building in Chicago, IL.
To purchase a print or digital copy of this image, click the image above and go to the "VISIT SHOP" button. For any other, please contact me or visit my on-line gallery.
Exif data: