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I feel kind of ashamed that I've followed the bad photography thread more than this one. Gonna go through my flickr contacts/photography folder and contribute to this in the morning.
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# ? Apr 1, 2011 02:57 |
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 10:48 |
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http://www.pieterhugo.com/the-hyena-other-men/ Holy crap this series is cool. The photos are really engaging to me and his write up of the story behind them is just as good. I really envy photographers who can also write. This inspired me to work on my own writing.
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# ? Apr 1, 2011 19:14 |
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"Yo, look at this loving monkey. Please buy my medicine now."
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# ? Apr 1, 2011 19:20 |
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Holy hell, hyenas are massive!
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# ? Apr 1, 2011 19:33 |
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RangerScum posted:"Yo, look at this loving monkey. Please buy my medicine now." It's interesting that the essay says people contacted the photographer in order to learn more about how the handlers stayed safe or about how the animals were treated, but never about why the hell they had to handle hyenas just to make a living in the first place.
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# ? Apr 1, 2011 19:39 |
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quote:At one stage the monkey was terrified by his driving. It grabbed hold of my leg and stared into my eyes. I could see its fear. Amazing, I've felt this way in foreign places with taxi drivers before, and my dad and even Chinese suppliers assure me it's ridiculous in China, I can't imagine what a Nigerian with a motley crew of animals would be like...especially when the monkey is scared.
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# ? Apr 1, 2011 19:55 |
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http://cup2013.wordpress.com/tag/sohei-nishino/ Holy. poo poo. This is awesome, and probably one of the few times I've properly used that word.
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# ? Apr 2, 2011 17:17 |
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Those are the types of works that are truly amazing to see in person. I could look at those for hours and pick out all the cool stuff.
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# ? Apr 2, 2011 17:40 |
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tibet2009_02 by arimotoshinya, on Flickr This thread needs more action.
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# ? Apr 15, 2011 01:28 |
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You'd have to make multiple attempts and be a monkey to not make an awesome photo out of that subject. I'm pretty sure only HDR could well and truly ruin it.
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# ? Apr 15, 2011 01:52 |
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Oh Horizon 202
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# ? Apr 16, 2011 16:14 |
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Thats an awesome shot! I had to look up Horizon 202...and...well I want one.xzzy posted:You'd have to make multiple attempts and be a monkey to not make an awesome photo out of that subject. Probably right, but I feel like the picture would be vastly different from another angle, not sure whether it'd be better or not, just different. One I just saw that I really like, and I'm not sure why exactly; By Dan Winters and I found out about it from this interview, maybe the interview/process discussion (He built that set specifically for that shot) is what makes me like it a lot; LINK
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# ? Apr 16, 2011 20:21 |
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A cool project on logging I saw today: http://www.davidpaulbayles.com/#mi=2&pt=1&pi=10000&s=0&p=2&a=0&at=0
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# ? Apr 19, 2011 03:00 |
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Not so much a single photo but a very well done time lapse. http://vimeo.com/22439234
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# ? Apr 19, 2011 06:45 |
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Dread Head posted:A cool project on logging I saw today: http://www.davidpaulbayles.com/#mi=2&pt=1&pi=10000&s=0&p=2&a=0&at=0 I am loving the poo poo out of #21
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# ? Apr 19, 2011 23:15 |
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You guys should definitely check this out, its a interview with Donald Weber.He has a special interest in exclusion zones and just finished documenting the one in Fukushima. http://www.vbs.tv/watch/picture-perfect--2/donald_weber
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# ? Apr 20, 2011 15:27 |
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After seeing Restrepo last year I took an interest in Tim Hetherington, a celebrated war photographer, who co-directed the movie with Sebastian Junger. He was killed yesterday in Libya along with Chris Hondros. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-13151490 His book Infidel which contains images from when he was in Afghanistan is amazing. http://www.timhetherington.com/
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# ? Apr 21, 2011 21:08 |
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-12618167 Quite amazing - an introspection from photographer Timothy Allen on a year and a half long assignment he had with the BBC. I found his last comment to be particularly true - that we can nitpick and poke holes in any photo but the overall impact is what truly matters.
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# ? Apr 25, 2011 03:10 |
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Oprah Haza posted:http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-12618167 You're not a real photographer unless your cameras look like this: http://thetravelphotographer.blogspot.com/2011/01/bbcs-human-planet.html
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# ? Apr 25, 2011 23:09 |
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Cross_ posted:You're not a real photographer unless your cameras look like this: Now THOSE guys need filters.
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# ? Apr 26, 2011 00:46 |
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It must be nice to not have to worry about your equipment.
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# ? Apr 26, 2011 00:51 |
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Yeah, that's not the equipment of someone who's had to save furiously for months and months in order to afford it.
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# ? Apr 26, 2011 03:26 |
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It took me a year and a half to save up and pull the trigger on my 5DII, I babied the hell out of that thing for the longest time. It was only after a very wet/muddy shoot that I realized the build quality was there for a reason. It took a little while to clean off but it's good as new. Now I'm a lot more adventurous with it. I just make sure the lenses I take are weathersealed. I have a very weird fear of getting mud stuck in the viewfinder though.
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# ? Apr 26, 2011 10:34 |
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General Gingersnap posted:It must be nice to not have to worry about your equipment. There was one photographer commentary on Libya I was listening to where they actually took his camera from him somehow, and he ended up buying a rebel with a kit lens from a local mall and continued covering what he could. I can't find the link right now, but it was pretty intense.
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# ? Apr 26, 2011 15:23 |
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AIIAZNSK8ER posted:There was one photographer commentary on Libya I was listening to where they actually took his camera from him somehow, and he ended up buying a rebel with a kit lens from a local mall and continued covering what he could. I can't find the link right now, but it was pretty intense. I had to check this out cause it sounds awesome, and just goes to prove that the equipment most definitely doesn't make the photography. I can't find an article, but there's a video report here; http://vimeo.com/21372525 It was John Moore and he was assigned to cover the revolutions in Egypt, Bahrain and Libya, but when he got to Bahrain he went through immigration to get his visa but then customs seized all his equipment, cameras and laptops. So the first place he went was a shopping mall to buy some cheap camera gear, A Canon Rebel body a cheap lens and a new laptop, and that was what he used for the whole assignment. Though at the end of his stay there he got his gear back, but only in time for his assignment in Libya. The video is just a slideshow of, what I assume are, his images. The commentary is great too.
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# ? Apr 26, 2011 15:39 |
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I have an incredible amount of respect for photojournalists/ documentary photographers that cover their assigned stories without their ~*~*~*~*~gear~*~*~*~. My mentor is a Magnum photographer, and while going over some edits the other day he told me about a time when he had to cover a story about a certain club that catered to the Russian mob in New York. (Im pretty sure it was in New York.) He went in with an Olympus point and shoot with a flash attachment and posed as a tourist while photographing a bunch of Russian mobsters. The camera might have been an XA2, I can find out though.
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# ? Apr 26, 2011 23:50 |
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Legit photojournalism is loving badass. It's a real shame the newspaper industry is where it is right now, because staff photojournalist positions have been some of the hardest hit in recent years. Our local daily's staff is down 50% from where it was just 5-10 years ago. That means everybody is forced to rush through multiple assignments just to get them done, whereas with a beefier staff, somebody might be able to spend a full day or multiple days really sinking their teeth into a good story and producing some quality work. So staff cuts lead to shoddier work which lead to more difficulty justifying the staff which leads to Also: poo poo photjournalists like: international travel "Because any rear end in a top hat can make a photo in his neighborhood. It takes a professional rear end in a top hat to make a photo 4,000 miles away."
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# ? Apr 27, 2011 16:51 |
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This picture killed me. Sometimes I think I am taking the wrong road by being as light as possible when I shoot assignments, but then I see poo poo like this and realize Im okay: EDIT: real content, check out the seminar videos on VII for badass photojournalists. http://www.viiphoto.com/video.php General Gingersnap fucked around with this message at 17:22 on Apr 27, 2011 |
# ? Apr 27, 2011 17:20 |
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(by Charlie Riedel) Saw it here: http://www.theatlantic.com/infocus/2011/04/storms-tornadoes-devastate-the-south/100055/
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# ? Apr 28, 2011 15:35 |
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General Gingersnap posted:This picture killed me. Sometimes I think I am taking the wrong road by being as light as possible when I shoot assignments, but then I see poo poo like this and realize Im okay: Those guys get called Christmas Trees by our photographers. You see them at every major golf event (it's probably the most distance-varied sport you can shoot, pain in the rear end).
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# ? Apr 29, 2011 06:53 |
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Not heard of Lid magazine {minor NWS} before, perhaps I wish I still hadn't; goddrat Steve Schapiro /burns flash heads.
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# ? Apr 29, 2011 19:31 |
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Some fantastic stuff in there, thanks for sharing.
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# ? Apr 29, 2011 20:16 |
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subx posted:Those guys get called Christmas Trees by our photographers. You see them at every major golf event (it's probably the most distance-varied sport you can shoot, pain in the rear end). How does one even get a photo pass for a golf event? Most of these places don't even allow cell phones.
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# ? Apr 30, 2011 17:20 |
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RizieN posted:One I just saw that I really like, and I'm not sure why exactly; I think part of it is he always builds those sets with weird perspectives. Like it looks correct from the camera, but that room is not squared off like a normal one would be. I think it reads as correct, but our brain somewhere knows it's not real which makes you stop and look at it a little more closely. I bought the "Juke Joints" book he mentions in that interview as an inspiration for those sets, and it's all pictures of these falling down buildings with weird sloping ceilings and leaning walls. The guy who shot it tried to correct it with the view camera and a lot of them have the same feel as Dan Winters stuff.
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# ? May 1, 2011 01:44 |
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Dmitri Baltermants was a Soviet photojournalist during WWII and is one of my all time favorite photographers.
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# ? May 1, 2011 04:56 |
General Gingersnap posted:Dmitri Baltermants was a Soviet photojournalist during WWII and is one of my all time favorite photographers. drat, I love that kind of documentary work. I cant imagine what it would feel like to take a really aesthetically pleasing picture of something so unpleasant. Reminds me of this guy: http://www.dago.dk/
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# ? May 1, 2011 09:11 |
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Aeka 2.0 posted:How does one even get a photo pass for a golf event? Most of these places don't even allow cell phones. Credentials are supposed to be assigned to media organizations, but for less than top-level events, depending on the sport and the venue, sometimes folks can finagle freelance passes.
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# ? May 1, 2011 15:39 |
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From the nytimes site, not sure who took it but I'm sure he/she is glad they did!
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# ? May 2, 2011 06:37 |
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http://fromme-toyou.tumblr.com/tagged/cinemagraph/page/1 tee hee
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# ? May 2, 2011 08:11 |
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 10:48 |
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rear end is my canvas posted:http://fromme-toyou.tumblr.com/tagged/cinemagraph/page/1 unf...
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# ? May 2, 2011 13:50 |