Timelapse videos are great for showing how much or how little things have changed over the year. The BBC made their own version of a then and now segment featuring a train ride from from London and Brighton.
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Timelapse videos are great for showing how much or how little things have changed over the year. The BBC made their own version of a then and now segment featuring a train ride from from London and Brighton. No comment yet.
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Deal delivers Europe's last big handset maker into US ownership and moves Microsoft firmly into device-manufacturing business
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Guest Article by: Sara Coppola Being a fashion photographer might seem like an easy job full of freedom. Though, the reality is quite different.
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Photography is as much about provocation as it is about reality. Sometimes artists want to do something surreal, something strange, clever, shocking, surprising, something that makes you double-take, scratch your head, or gasp.
Kitty Fisher's insight:
Picsart has to be one of the few blogs that showcases the talent that is hidden within the site. Here they have some remarkable, creativity brewing from this gallery.
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After graduating from photography school, I spent a good deal of my 20s photographing the city scapes of New York. In my 30s, after I relocated to upstate New York, I discovered a new muse–the landscape.
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Interview with mobile photographer, Sacha Dohmen to find out about his mobile photography work, style and approach to photography.
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An interview with one of photographies leading mobile street capture's, Sacha Dohmen. He also gives advice to those amateur street photographers, out there in the world. A great read.
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San Francisco-based interactive artist and freelance creative Ivan Cash recently had a neat idea: go out on the streets of San Francisco and ask random peo
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To add a bit of inspiration and general curiosity to the mix, this video will show you have a photo on your phone, can invoke humun connection.
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"With a list of different online classes and first person point of view tactics, you can learn the beginning stages of photography, on your own time. And in doing so discovering the fundmentals that can change your whole outlook to photography." Via Kitty Fisher
Kitty Fisher's curator insight,
August 29, 2013 11:12 AM
Before you head off to Photoshop, it would be best advised to learn some cool little techniques about using your DSLR camera, first.
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Latest PostsBlog PostsFlickr Jason D. LittleJason Little is a photographer (shooting macros, portraits, candids, and the occasional landscape), part time writer, and full time lover of music.
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"New York City-based photographer Supranav Dash is interested in India's occupations -- not the rich and glamorous ones, but the ones held by those who are lower in the society’s Caste System. Since 2011, Dash has been working on a project called “Marginal Trades.” His goal is to capture the trades, professions, and businesses in India that might not be around after another few generations."
Kitty Fisher's insight:
While the majority of us typically take photos that are involved in our environment. Take a look at Supranav Dash's photography, showcasing India's Endangered Professions.
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Yahoo updates Flickr iOS app bringing new filters and photo editing options: It looks like Yahoo wants Flickr to be the one stop app for creating and sharing photos, at least on...
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Popular iOS app Repix launches on Android with S Pen, Airview support androidandme.com Repix is an interesting take on a photo editor, because it combines the filters of Instagram, the general controls over brightness and contrast of almost all... |
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(SR5) Hot! First images of the new DSC-QX10 and DSC-QX100 lens-cameras! | sonyalpharumors. Is this the biggest thing to happen to iPhoneography and iPhone Video in a long time? SonyAlphaRumours.com had this story in early August but it was, as such, a rumour – but if the latest updates are genuine it appears Sony are about to launch 2 discreet mobile lenses which will attach to smartphones magnetically, be controlled by a dedicated App on the mobile device and record internally in the lens to microSD. The communication with the mobile is either WiFi or Bluetooth and the spec on the lenses is pretty damn impressive."
Kitty Fisher's insight:
Sony has gone far and behind with this attachable lens that would snap on to the back of your mobile phone. As technology everyday exceeds expectation, this one happens to be the real deal.
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With so much horrible mobile photography out there, it's definitely time to learn how to do it right. Here's all that you need to know on that very subject. So you have a smartphone and you think you can take incredible photos with it because it is just so smart, fancy and has so many megapixels? Wrong!
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Street photographer Eric Kim has always believed in the value of 'open source.' Usually a term reserved for software and code, open source is a development model that promotes free public access and redistribution rights for a product. I also wanted to announce that I have recently made all of my photos on Flickr available for free as full-resolution downloads. So if you have ever liked any of my photos and wanted a print, feel free to download any photo and print any sized photo you want. Use it as wallpapers, prints to hang on your wall, or whatever you want to use them for (non commercial). And no, you don’t need my permission.
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Eric Kim has taken the term 'Open Source' and has given it reason behind the term. Kim feels that anything information based, will always be free on his blog. And now he's added his photos along with it.
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Stats from the infographic include:
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Impressing commercial clients involves scouting out unique locations and working expertly with lighting equipment. Photographers who go the extra mile are rewarded with clients who return to them again and again.
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"A few months ago, I was in Los Angeles and grabbed coffee with my friend Eric Steelberg. Eric's a talented cinematographer and mentioned a piece of gear he wanted me to check out. Expecting the latest digital gadget to appear out of his bag, I was surprised to see him pull out a large brick of a camera that I'd never seen before. It was a Polaroid 180 Land Camera from the 1970s."
Kitty Fisher's insight:
From the old style to the new, Matt Morris gives us a close race, to which is better in instant photography. On old Polaroid land camera that produces a photo in less than 90 seconds, or a digital format that was also captured seconds ago. Maybe we should just live with both?
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1. A good photo asks more questions than provides answers. 2. 35mm as a focal length is generally ideal for most street photographers. 28mm is too wide (most people don’t get close enough) and 50mm is too tight...
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There probably aren’t a lot of people out there who would complain that taking pictures on their smartphone is inconvenient. Often, accessing the camera is a quick click or swipe away, and taking a picture another.
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Sublime images of the night sky are brilliantly captured by filmmaker and photographer Michael Shainblum using long exposures and multiple image composites
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Once upon a time, mobile megapixels were the key. In fact, not so many years ago, many questioned whether there was any value whatsoever in having a camera built into your phone. Convergence for its own sake is undeniably a problem in today’s crossover-soaked market, but it’s now hard to argue that photography and the modern smartphone aren’t a compelling match.
Kitty Fisher's insight:
When it comes to your camera phone, you wouldn't think twice about the pixels...would you? Think again.
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Whether you are professional photographer that likes to travel light (i.e. without a laptop) or casual photographer that simply likes the convenience of using the iPad, there are a number of apps in the app store for editing photos. We have sifted through the bunch and selected some of our favorites.
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If you enjoy design and typography but Photoshop drives you nuts, you might enjoy this new app for iPhone.
Kitty Fisher's insight:
Studio is a new app, where design was their primary idea, giving focus to a navigation of beautiful layers, creating out of this world captions. Could this be the next big thing? |
When you combine different parts of history to make a timelapse video, nothing quite makes your mind tingle at either extraoridnary or un-changing elements that have happened over the years.