Category: Photography

  • Photographer Uses A 160-Year-Old Camera To Create Unique Portraits

    Photographer Uses A 160-Year-Old Camera To Create Unique Portraits

    He does it his own way, or rather the way it was done back in the 1800s.

    The Nashville-based artist makes portraits using both tintype (a photograph taken as a positive on a thin tinplate) and ambrotype (an early type of photograph made by placing a glass negative against a dark background):

    My tintype images are created using equipment made more than 160 years ago.

    All from an era when cameras were made by craftsmen in small shops and lenses were designed using slide rules, experience, and feel. The inherent flaws of these instruments lend themselves perfectly to his view of a beautifully imperfect world.

    These techniques were used in the 1850s and the 1860s, and using them now serves almost as a time machine to take the photo subjects hundreds of years back.

    More info: giles clement | facebook (h/t: boredpandamymodernmet)

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  • Finalists Of The Wildlife Photographer Of The Year 2016

    Finalists Of The Wildlife Photographer Of The Year 2016

    This one is for you, nature lovers, the 52nd annual ‘Wildlife Photographer of the Year‘ (WPY) competition has released a list of finalists and with 11 examples of their incredible works.

    Again we get to witness photographs that will keep us wondering how they were even possible to make. From perfectly timed shots to almost stage-like compositions, these will get your inner photographer brewing with new ideas.

    The competition was started back in 1965 with a rather modest 500 entries. Modest because now it attracts almost 50,000 submissions from professionals to amateurs from 95 countries. All of the pictures are then judged in three categories: originality, creativity, and technical excellence.

    If you’ll happen to be somewhere around London in October, make sure you visit the WPY52 exhibition which will be on display from the 21st of October at the Natural History Museum.

    More info: nhm.ac.uk (h/t: boredpandadaily mail)

    #1 Splitting The Catch By Audun Rikardsen, Norway

    A large male killer whale feeds on herring that have been squeezed out of the boat’s closing fishing net. He has learned the sound that this type of boat makes when it retrieves its gear and homed in on it. Usually, it’s the fishing boats that look for the killer whales and humpbacks, which help to locate the shoals of herring that migrate to these Arctic Norwegian waters. But in recent winters, the whales have also started to follow the boats.

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    #2 Swarming Under The Stars By Imre Potyó, Hungary

    Imre was captivated by the chaotic swarming of mayflies on Hungary’s River Rába and dreamt of photographing the spectacle beneath a starlit sky. For a few days each year (at the end of July or beginning of August), vast numbers of the adult insects emerge from the Danube tributary, where they developed as larvae. On this occasion, the insects emerged just after sunset. At first, they stayed close to the water, but once they had mated, the females gained altitude. Winners will be announced on 18 October.

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    #3 Nosy Neighbour By Sam Hobson, UK

    Sam knew exactly who to expect when he set his camera on the wall one summer’s evening in a suburban street in Bristol, the UK’s famous fox city. He wanted to capture the inquisitive nature of the urban red fox in a way that would pique the curiosity of its human neighbors about the wildlife around them.

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    #4 The Disappearing Fish By Iago Leonardo, Spain

    In the open ocean, there’s nowhere to hide, but the lookdown fish – a name it probably gets from the steep profile of its head, with the mouth set low and large eyes high – is a master of camouflage. Recent research suggests that it uses special platelets in its skin cells to reflect polarised light (light moving in a single plane), making itself almost invisible to predators and potential prey. The platelets scatter polarised light depending on the angle of the sun and the fish, doing a better job than simply reflecting it like a mirror.

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    #5 Playing Pangolin By Lance Van De Vyver, New Zealand/South Africa

    Lance had tracked the pride for several hours before they stopped to rest by a waterhole, but their attention was not on drinking. The lions in South Africa’s Tswalu Kalahari Private Game reserve had discovered a Temminck’s ground pangolin. This nocturnal, ant-eating mammal is armour-plated with scales made of fused hair, and it curls up into an almost impregnable ball when threatened.

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    #6 Termite Tossing By Willem Kruger, South Africa

    Termite after termite after termite – using the tip of its massive beak-like forceps to pick them up, the hornbill would flick them in the air and then swallow them. Foraging beside a track in South Africa’s semi-arid Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, the southern yellow-billed hornbill was so deeply absorbed in termite snacking that it gradually worked its way to within 6 meters (19ft) of where Willem sat watching from his vehicle.

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    #7 Crystal Precision By Mario Cea, Spain

    Every night, not long after sunset, about 30 common pipistrelle bats emerge from their roost in a derelict house in Salamanca, Spain, to go hunting. Each has an appetite for up to 3,000 insects a night, which it eats on the wing. Its flight is characteristically fast and jerky, as it tunes its orientation with echolocation to detect objects in the dark.

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    #8 Blast Furnace By Alexandre Hec, France

    When the lava flow from Kilauea on Hawaii’s Big Island periodically enters the ocean, the sight is spectacular, but on this occasion, Alexandre was in for a special treat. Kilauea (meaning ‘spewing’ or ‘much spreading’) is one of the world’s most active volcanoes, in constant eruption since 1983. As red-hot lava at more than 1,000˚C (1,832˚F) flows into the sea, vast plumes of steam hiss up, condensing to produce salty, acidic mist or rain.

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    #9 Thistle-Plucker By Isaac Aylward, UK

    Isaac composed this alpine-meadow tableau with the sea of soft purple knapweed behind, accentuating the flashing red of the linnet’s plumage. He was determined to keep pace with the linnet that he spotted while hiking in Bulgaria’s Rila Mountains, finally catching up with the tiny bird when it settled to feed on a thistle flowerhead. From the florets that were ripening, it pulled out the little seed parachutes one by one, deftly nipped off the seeds and discarded the feathery down.

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    #10 Collective Courtship By Scott Portelli, Australia

    Thousands of giant cuttlefish gather each winter in the shallow waters of South Australia’s Upper Spencer Gulf for their once-in-a-lifetime spawning. Males compete for territories that have the best crevices for egg‐laying and then attract females with mesmerizing displays of changing skin color, texture and pattern. Rivalry among the world’s largest cuttlefish – up to a meter (3.3ft) long – is fierce, as males outnumber females by up to 11 to one.

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    #11 Golden Relic By Dhyey Shah, India

    With fewer than 2,500 mature adults left in the wild, in fragmented pockets of forest in northeastern India (Assam) and Bhutan, Gee’s golden langurs are endangered. Living high in the trees, they are also difficult to observe. But, on the tiny man-made island of Umananda, in Assam’s Brahmaputra River, you are guaranteed to see one. The site of a temple dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva, the island is equally famous for its introduced golden langurs. Within moments of stepping off the boat, Dhyey spotted the golden coat of a langur high up in a tree.

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  • Photographer Gets Hilariously Photoshopped By 100 Pro Photographers

    Usually, it’s the photographer who does the Photoshopping part, but sometimes tables turn and they get to be the subjects as well. That’s what happened with Pratik Naik, who went out on a photo trip to Venice beach with his buddy photographer John Schell and unexpectedly became an internet sensation.

    As Pratik was holding his girlfriend’s belongings while she was posing for John Schell, he struck a dreamy pose, that John just couldn’t let pass immortalized. The photographer snapped a majestic pose of his colleague wearing his girlfriend’s hat and gazing towards the setting sun.

    Then John posted the pic on Pratik’s Facebook page so his fellow photographers could take a look as well. And it went absolutely viral among them.

    I thought the worst thing that would happen would be everyone asking why I have a Canon strap with a Sony camera! A true photographic sin…

    But as true artists do, they rather focused on the whole picture, and to make it even better, they made some adjustments… For a full list head over to the retouchist.

    More info: retouchist (h/t: petapixel)

    The original

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    Image source: John Schell

    #1 I’m Flying, Jack!

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    Image source: Toan Thai

    #2 All You Need Is Love

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    Image source: Alaxandra Cameron

    #3 Opa Pratik Style

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    Image source: Duncan Cheng

    #4 Never Leave Your Sombrero When Going To A Gun Fight

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    Image source: Zohar Ralt

    #5 Is Nice, Yes?

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    Image source: Ettore Franceschi

    #6 Mona Lisa Is Hiding A Secret

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    Image source: Jacob Rosenvinge

    #7 Fits Perfectly

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    Image source: Gerry Kingsley

    #8 Just Taking Care Of My Family

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    Image source: Dallas Southcott

    #9 Danger Is His Calling

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    Image source: Jonas Jensen

    #10 True Love Never Fades

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    Image source: Chris Knight

    #11 I Double Dare You!

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    Image source: Duncan Cheng

    #12 Frankly My Dear, I Don’t Give A Damn

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    Image source: Viorella Luciana

    #13 Did I Get It?

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    Image source: Benjamin Jon

    #14 Exploring Alternative Career Paths

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    Image source: Jason Kruppa

    #15 What’s The Second Rule Of Fight Club?

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  • Wife Captures Husband’s Depression With Intimate Photo Series

    Wife Captures Husband’s Depression With Intimate Photo Series

    To fathom and to make sense of the real her tormented by depression husband was facing, Maureen Drennan didn’t rely on words, instead, she let her photos tell the story.

    That’s how photo project “The Sea That Surrounds Us” came to be. The name comes from a line once written in a love poem by Pablo Neruda called “Night on the Island”. Except for this time it represents the photographer combining pictures of her husband Paul with pictures from Block Island and Rhode Island, places where she spent her childhood.

    It is a rare look into the life of a person who’s suffering from depression and we get to experience it in a very intimate way, from a family member’s point of view. And that’s not even mentioning the incredible artistic value the series holds. Take a look.

    More info: Maureen Drennan (boredpandahuffpost)

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  • Half-Told Stories

    Half-Told Stories

    In her series Personal Projects Peruvian photographer, Daniela Muttini depicts the female body in existential situations. Most of the photos play up the contrast between the beauty of the models, bright colours, or spectacular backgrounds and the cruel stories the pictures are intended to tell: Naked bodies covered in tulle, a huddled woman alone in the desert, a pink gun, pink blood.

    The observer looks at sceneries of struggle, agony, and determination. Even though you don’t see real wounds, weapons or violence, nearly every motive makes you cringe. Moreover, the level of abstraction incites the viewers’ fantasy and allows an interpretation of the portrayed moment. What has happened to those bodies? What are the untold stories of those persons?

    But Muttini is not willing to give any answers. „I like half-told stories; tales with no beginnings or ends, just frozen moments that forge more questions rather than answer anything“, explains Muttini. Instead, she aims at the viewers’ emotions and personal narratives that are provoked by her stunning pictures.

     

    All images © Daniela Muttini

  • This 16-Year-Old’s Instagram Will Make You Go Travel

    This 16-Year-Old’s Instagram Will Make You Go Travel

    Think you have a quite marvelous Instagram account? All things considered, be prepared to be bested by Jannik Obenhoff, a 16-year-old picture taker whose pics will make you, sitting in the workplace,… verging.

    As he says himself:

    “You’ll perceive how wonderful nature can be, if u won’t go out and investigate”.

    Jannik has filled his Instagram account with scene photography, once in a while blending individuals in the shot, now and again giving his group of onlookers the ethereal point of view with his automaton. The outcomes are first class, and in spite of the fact that he’s at the early phase of his vocation, he could as of now be contrasted with the works of an expert picture taker.

    He began practicing this interest seriously when he was 13, and over a time of three years he’s now assembled, 200,000 devotees

    More info: instagram (h/t: boredpanda)

     

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  • Become an epic sculpture by putting your head in a gallery

    Become an epic sculpture by putting your head in a gallery

    Georgian artist Tezi Gabunia needs to activate a conversation about hyper-realistic problems in an artwork. His modus operandi is falsification. In his workplace your head into rdquo & gallery, Gabunia needed to bring the individuals, rather than the other way around the galleries and the artwork.

    He created tiny models of well-known museums like the Louvre and galleries like Gagosian.

    Individuals become a display themselves, take an image and can set their head on the models.

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    All images © Tezi Gabunia via Designboom

  • Brock Turner’s Release Inspires A Powerful Anti-Sexual Assault Photoshoot

    Brock Turner’s Release Inspires A Powerful Anti-Sexual Assault Photoshoot

    Brock Turner became famous back in June 2016 for all the wrong reasons. The former student at Stanford University in California was found guilty for sexually assaulting an unconscious woman, and what outraged the student community the most was that he was sentenced to just six months jail time and served only half of that before his release.

    Yana Mazurkevich, a 20-year-old student at Ithaca College in New York, just couldn’t let this one slide so easily, so she cooperated with the sexual assault awareness media platform called Current Solutions and created an expressive photo series called It Happened, where she’s revealing the more graphical and hard-to-watch side of the whole ordeal.

    As Mazurkevich wrote on her Facebook page:

    In response to Brock Turner’s early release, this photo series aims to continue the conversation on sexual assault, As well as to raise a huge finger to Turner and his 3-month jail time.

    More info: current solutions | yana mazurkevich | facebook (h/t: boredpanda)

     

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  • Isamaya Ffrench Paints Her Beliefs On Faces

    Isamaya Ffrench Paints Her Beliefs On Faces

    Isamaya Ffrench worked as a face painter at children’s parties before her worldwide career as a makeup artist started.

    She tells stories through people’s faces and isn’t afraid of using unconventional colors and techniques with artistic ease.

    At the age of 25, YSL Beauté appointed Isamaya Ffrench as its  UK make-up ambassador. She works with artists like Kanye West and Designers like Junya Watanabe. Isamaya Ffrench studied 3D design at Chelsea College of Arts and Product and Industrial Design at Central Saint Martins.

    She lives in London and Paris.

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    All images via Isamaya Ffrench

  • Photographer Captures Raw Emotions Of Women Having An Orgasm

    Photographer Captures Raw Emotions Of Women Having An Orgasm

    Professional photographer Albertas Pocej has set himself with a personal challenge to capture the moment of women reaching the highest point of physical pleasure – orgasm.

    How did he come up with this idea? Well, he dreamt it:

    I simply woke up and I knew I just have to do it.

    The hardest part was to find the models for these sessions: I started to write everybody I know without any boundaries since all the women are so different. The answers I got were mostly two kinds:

    “I don’t have enough courage.”

    and just the silence, which is also pretty obvious as an answer.

    When I finally found 20 women that were ready to take part in this project, some of them refused to continue when I told them that it will not be acting, and some of them weren’t able to relax already while shooting. So at the end, there were only 15 left.

    And you know the cool part about it? None of it was faked. The models were actually having orgasms in front of his camera: “I didn’t want this project to be a cliché, I didn’t want any acting – just the real feeling as it is. Every human being is different, so are their orgasms. I wasn’t trying to make it any better as it is in life. I wanted to make those looking at these pictures think. And clichés don’t make people think.

    More info: albert pocej (h/t: boredpanda)

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