
Upcoming Documentary About the Death and Rebirth of Polaroid Pictures
Time Zero: The Last Year of Polaroid Film is an upcoming documentary about the death of Polaroid and the subsequent rise of "The Impossible Project".
Time Zero: The Last Year of Polaroid Film is an upcoming documentary about the death of Polaroid and the subsequent rise of "The Impossible Project".
Nikon’s new flagship D4 DSLR and its cousin the D800 were both designed by famed Italian car designer …
Digital Trends has published an interesting “inside look at what’s behind the little …
Street photographer Markus Hartel recently did some shooting on the sidewalks of New York City on a rainy day with a Kodak Playtouch rigged to his Leica M9 and 28mm Elmarit. The above video shows a point-of-view documentation of his walk along with the "keeper" shots that resulted.
Unhappy with Facebook’s acquisition of Instagram and want to flee the photo sharing service? …
The Web Platform Team over at Adobe is currently working on …
PDN has published an interview with art collector Jonathan Sobel, who’s …
Google recently brought its Street View camera inside the White House for the …
Here’s a short video tutorial on how you can make a cozy for lens protection using some fleece and …
Lavatory Self-Portraits in the Flemish Style is a spontaneous portrait project that photographer Nina Katchadourian started while traveling by plane in 2010.
Photographer Clemens Wirth wanted to dive into microscopy, so he attached his Canon …
French photographers organization Union des Photographes Professionnels (UPP) launched a controversial new advertising …
Snapping a self-portrait of oneself in a mirror is something every photographer has probably done before, but have you …
"The Collective Snapshot" is a series by Spanish photographer Pep Ventosa (previously featured here) that consists of abstract images of famous landmarks created by blending together dozens of ordinary snapshots. His goal is to "create an abstraction of the places we've been an the things we've seen", and to create images that are both familiar and foreign at the same time.
In 9th grade, photographer Joe Edelman was given the assignment of creating 5 …
When the grip on his Canon Rebel T2i finally peeled and warped beyond repair, NYU computer science and mechanical …
Kodak is asking the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for permission to pay $13.5 million in bonuses to roughly 300 executives …
Here’s a short sizzle reel created by Vashi Nedomansky that shows various shots …
Turns out retro photo filters and mobile photo sharing are big business. Just how big? Get this: Facebook has …
Japanese photographer kiyoshimachine has a quirky set of photographs titled Monster67 that features people wearing the "67 Head", a giant Pentax SLR.
Here’s a humorous clip from Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End that some photographers may be able to …
Here’s a video in which photographer Ryan Schude walks through how he went …
To promote its new One X phone (and the camera on it), HTC came up with the bizarre idea of doing a skydiving fashion shoot with photography student Nick Jojola and model (and professional skydiver) Roberta Mancino. During the photoshoot above the Arizona desert, Jojola plummeted to Earth at 126MPH while Mancino whizzed by at 181MPH, giving the photographer a tiny window of 0.8 seconds to squeeze off the shot.
Want to capture some wind-blown hair in a portrait photograph but don’t have access to an electric fan or …
Looking for a weekend project? Try you hand at creating an anthotype, or …
This past Wednesday, customs officers in China announced the bust of a gigantic camera smuggling operation and the arrest of 14 suspects connected with the illegal transportation of $63.5 million worth of camera equipment. The smuggling ring has allegedly smuggled 60,204 cameras, 13,623 lenses, 483 flashes, 1,025 video cameras, and 348 projectors. Since camera equipment is much cheaper to buy in Hong Kong -- 20% to 30% less -- smugglers profit by sneaking the gear into mainland China (avoiding customs taxes in the process) and selling it through the gray market.
"The People I've Met" is a project by photographer Krista Langley that involves one Polaroid camera and one question. Langley shoots portraits of her friends and family and asks them to write down the answer to the question "what would you do if you knew you could not fail?".
So, from time to time, I receive requests to use my images for various purposes — like on a blog or a pamphlet or a calendar or the side of a zeppelin or for a urinal cake. Typically, if they are nice and they’re not going to be making a load of cash off where they’d like to use my image then I’ll let them use it as long as they give me credit. I’m especially generous with environmental interests and non-profits and ice cream manufacturers offering vouchers for all-you-can-eat tours.
But then there are the chumps (and chumpettes) who will be making a substantial amount of money off of the use of my image and I send them packing unless they pony up a fair amount of money. The latest version of this repetitive saga really got caught all up in my craw and so I felt the need to write a bit about it.
Instagram is set to raise a massive Series B round of venture financing and, …
After being introduced to long, pointy Mexican boots through a Facebook video, Brookyln-based photographers Alex Troesch and Aline Paley decided to travel to the northern city of Matehuala, Mexico to see and document the shoes themselves. TIME writes,
In northern Mexico, the pointy boots trend is more about flash than fashion. “They’re worn by people who want to impress other people,” Troesch says. In fact, one boot maker they met had transformed a regular pair of shoes into pointy boots for a client who wanted to impress the jury of a dance contest. That’s how the fervor started—but not everyone is a fan. “Sometimes you’d hear people teasing others about wearing the boots,” Troesch says. “Still, it was very interesting for us to witness how such a common object—cowboy boots—worn by so many people in northern Mexico could be reinvented and reappropriated by young teenagers whose eyes and ears are so many times directed towards the other side of the border.”