Great Reads in Photography: January 9, 2022

Every Sunday, we bring together a collection of easy-reading articles from analytical to how-to to photo features in no particular order that did not make our regular daily coverage. Enjoy!

Aperture 's Best Photography Features of 2021 – Aperture

In 2021 Aperture celebrated photography in New York and New Delhi, revisited Judith Joy Ross's timeless portraits, considered the "photobook phenomenon," and asked how images can tell new stories about Latinx identity.

Meet the Shortlisted Photographers and Winners of Portrait of Britain 2021 – Creative Boom

The UK's biggest annual photography exhibition, Portrait of Britain, has returned. It reflects the turbulent pandemic times we've all endured yet also finds the beauty within this global struggle.

' Born With a Twisted Mind': Helmut Newton's Freaky Fashion – in Pictures – The Guardian

Fashion, Melbourne, 1955 © Helmut Newton, Helmut Newton Foundation, Berlin, courtesy Taschen Yves Saint Laurent, Queen, Paris, 1969 © Helmut Newton, Helmut Newton Foundation, Berlin, courtesy Taschen

Helmut Newton. Legacy is published by Taschen

The photographer's offbeat shoots for magazines such as Vogue and Vanity Fair had a lasting influence on visual art – and are the subject of a new book.

Through Lens and Time: German Museum Brings History of Camera, Cinema and TV to Life StarsAndStripes

A small museum near Kaiserslautern, Germany, offers visitors a look back at the development of technologies that allowed us to record memories large and small.

Whoever Invented USB-C Deserves a Nobel Prize -- TheNextWeb

Depositphotos

USB-C made being a gadget nerd so much better. Now, if only Apple would stick USB-C on the iPhone….

Georgia Museum of Art Receives Major Photography Gift -- ARTFIXdaily

The Georgia Museum of Art at the University of Georgia has received a gift of nearly 3,000 photographs with a current appraised value of nearly $8 million, placing it amongst one of the nation's best in 20th-century photography.

Fact Check: How do I Spot Manipulated Images? -- Deutsche Welle (DW)

If an image seems fishy, something is likely awry. But how can you prove if a picture has been manipulated? Here are a few tips.

16 Questions About One Historical Photo: Tattooed Lady Betty Broadbent _– Flickr Blog
_

Betty Broadbent, the 'Tattooed Venus', Sydney, 4 April 1938, photographer Ray Olsen, Pix Magazine, courtesy State Library of New South Wales

In this One Photo, 16 Questions interview, Senior Curator at the State Library of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, Geoffrey Barker shares the story of Betty Broadbent, the most photographed tattooed lady of the 20th century.

How and Why to Use Negative Space in Photography -- MakeUseOf

Depositphotos

Negative space helps your subjects stand out in photos.

Duchess of Cambridge: New Photos Mark Kate's 40th Birthday -- BBC

The portraits were captured by celebrated fashion photographer Paolo Roversi, famed for working with industry stars like Naomi Campbell and Kate Moss. The images were taken at Kew Gardens back in November and will form part of a project from the National Portrait Gallery where the duchess is a patron.

In the 1960s, NASA Photographers Captured Glimpses of the Universe. Now, the Iconic Images Are Available on Artnet Auctions – Artnet News

Matthew Parciak, a photography associate at Artnet Auctions, dives into the history of some of NASA's most famous images.

To see an archive of past issues of Great Reads in Photography, click here.

We welcome comments as well as suggestions. As we cannot possibly cover each and every source, if you see something interesting in your reading or local newspaper anywhere in the world, kindly forward the link to us here. ALL messages will be personally acknowledged.

About the author : Phil Mistry is a photographer and teacher based in Atlanta, GA. He started one of the first digital camera classes in New York City at The International Center of Photography in the 90s. He was the director and teacher for Sony/Popular Photography magazine’s Digital Days Workshops. You can reach him here.

Image credits: Header photo portions licensed from Depositphotos

#inspiration #news #greatreadsinphotography #grip #philmistry

Great Reads in Photography: January 9, 2022

Every Sunday, we bring together a collection of easy-reading articles from analytical to how-to to photo features in no particular order that did not make

PetaPixel

Great Reads in Photography: January 2, 2022

Every Sunday, we bring together a collection of easy-reading articles from analytical to how-to to photo features in no particular order that did not make our regular daily coverage. Enjoy!

**New Year's Celebrations Around the World **– CNN

**New Year's Eve 2021 Around the World – in Pictures **– The Guardian

Embed from Getty ImagesIn many cities across the globe, New Year's festivities were scaled back. In New York City's traditional Times Square celebrations, everybody was expected to wear a mask, and the crowd was limited in size to 15,000 instead of the usual 58,000. ****

Embed from Getty Images

TIME 's Top 10 Photos of 2021 -- TIME

Embed from Getty Images

Each year in November, the TIME photo team comes together to narrow down the thousands of images made by photographers around the world since January. The ones that make the final cut for our top 10 can be striking in composition, shocking to experience, news-making moments, or all of the above. We find ourselves pausing to honor these images and their creators because we know there is so much more to the photograph than just the click of a shutter. -- TIME

Embed from Getty Images Read also: TIME Has Published its 100 Best Photos of the Year

2021 in Pictures: Striking Photojournalism from Around the World – BBC

Hover your cursor over the photo to read the story of the orphaned mountain gorilla, Ndakasi, who passed away after this photo was taken.

Embed from Getty Images This selection includes some of the most powerful pictures taken by news agency photographers around the world in 2021.

The principal deputy press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, became the first black woman in 30 years to host a daily press briefing at the White House. Jean-Pierre is the first openly gay spokeswoman and second Black woman to give the briefing.

Embed from Getty Images

Other 2021 Photo Stories & Lists:

**The Best Photographs of 2021 – and the Stories Behind Them **– The Guardian

17 Of Our Best Photo Stories From 2021 – BuzzFeed News

Vanity Fair's Year in PhotographsVanity Fair

Pixel Peeping: The 12 Biggest Camera and Photography Trends of 2022 -- TechRadar

Oppo's retractable smartphone camera, courtesy Oppo

1.) Photographers enter a post-Instagram world
2.) Deepfakes go deeper
3.) New camera manufacturers enter the game

Check out nine more trends and details at the link above.

Read also:PetaPixel's Bold Camera Predictions for 2022

We're starting a new tradition here at PetaPixel , where our staff (we are over a dozen strong now) gets together to discuss the things they know, not just think, will transpire over the course of the next calendar year. As bold predictions go, we're almost certainly going to get a lot of this wrong.

Street Views -- Cabinet

Broadway, New York City, 1850 photo courtesy J. Paul Getty Museum

Stanford art historian Kim Beil writes in Cabinet:

City streets seemed eerily empty in the early years of photography. During minutes-long exposures, carriage traffic and even ambling pedestrians blurred into nonexistence. The only subjects that remained were those that stood still: buildings, trees, the road itself. In one famous image, a bootblack and his customer [Louis Daguerre's 1838 photograph] appear to be the lone survivors on a Parisian boulevard…

These static sentinels of early city views were displaced at the end of the 1850s. City streets came to life thanks to improved chemistry and the use of smaller negative plates, which required less light for exposure. The new process was described as "instantaneous" [capturing moving people and horse-drawn carriages]…

During COVID-19 lockdowns, streets and squares truly were plague-stricken and empty. Drones buzzed over the avenues, vacant save for ambulances. Photographers stood in the middle of once-busy boulevards, taking glamour shots of the apocalypse.

Annie Leibovitz: Intimidating and Not. She Talks About her New Photo Book' Wonderland,' What Celebrities are Like and How Magazines are Less Glossy – Chicago Tribune

Sean Combs and Kate Moss, Hyatt Hotel, Paris, 1999 © Annie Leibovitz. From Wonderland by Annie Leibovitz, published by Phaidon.

One of the best stories about Leibovitz is that time she photographed Queen Elizabeth II (also in the book) and asked Her Majesty to remove the crown. The Queen was sort of, well … Wait, who are you? The problem, Leibovitz told me, was a BBC crew was filming this and made it look as if the Queen stormed out when actually she stormed in. – Chicago Tribune

The First Photo of a Single Snowflake in 1885 -- Smithsonian

Photomicrograph of Stellar Snowflake No. 1018. Photograph by Bentley, W. A (Wilson Alwyn) 1865-1931, taken around 1890. Courtesy Smithsonian.

Smithsonian Institute archives record:

Wilson A. Bentley first became fascinated with snow during his childhood on a Vermont farm, and he experimented for years with ways to view individual snowflakes in order to study their crystalline structure.

He eventually attached a camera to his microscope, and in 1885 he successfully photographed the flakes. This photomicrograph and more than five thousand others supported the belief that no two snowflakes are alike, leading scientists to study his work and publish it in numerous scientific articles and magazines.

In 1903 Bentley sent prints of his snowflakes to the Smithsonian, hoping they might be of interest to Secretary Samuel P. Langley.

Read also:These Are the Highest Resolution Photos of Snowflakes Ever Captured

Say Cheese! 5 Simple Tricks to Look Better in Family Photos and Selfies – Kim Komando

  • Push your face forward to minimize neck fat
  • Want sparkling eyes? Look toward the light
  • Check the link above for three more tips and complete details.

    When you "smize," you smile with your eyes. This advice from Tyra Banks, the first African American woman to be featured on the covers of GQ and the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue , makes even more sense in a masked COVID world!

    Read also: Tell Your Subjects to Say ‘Cheeks’ Instead of ‘Cheese’ for a More Genuine Smile

    **Photography In the National Parks: Being Prepared and Knowing Your Limits **– National Parks Traveler

    The colors of winter at Paradise, Mount Rainier National Park © Rebecca Latson

    During what season will you be doing your activity? Oh, you're headed to bear country? That salmon scented body wash was a bold choice. Good luck. – National Park Service

    What Is Rembrandt Lighting? How to Use It for Portrait Photography _ -- MakeUseOf_

    Self-portrait in Oriental Dress showing his signature lighting, circa 1631, Rembrandt

    Rembrandt lighting is a photographic lighting style based on the lighting used by Dutch painter Rembrandt in the 17th century.

    It is typically achieved by placing the key light high and to one side of the face. It properly lights one side of the face, while the other side uses the interaction of shadows and light coming from the fill light or reflector.

    Classic Rembrandt lighting in photography, Depositphotos

    Notable: Origin of use of "Rembrandt Lighting" as a Photographic Term

    Pioneering movie director Cecil B. DeMille is credited with the first use of the term. While shooting the 1915 film, The Warrens of Virginia, DeMille borrowed some portable spotlights from the Mason Opera House in downtown Los Angeles and "began to make shadows where shadows would appear in nature."

    When business partner Sam Goldwyn saw the film with only half an actor's face illuminated, he feared the exhibitors would pay only half the price for the picture. After DeMille told him it was Rembrandt lighting, Sam's reply was jubilant with relief: "for Rembrandt lighting, the exhibitors would pay double!" -- Wikipedia

    **Will AI Kill Stock Photography? **– Selling Stock

    **The 7 Most Extreme and Bizarre Lenses I 've Ever Tested -- **Christopher Frost

    Check out unusual lenses from the Canon EF 50mm f/1.0 L USM (production lens) to the Canon 400mm f/2 (non-production lens)

    How a Nat Geo Photographer Selects the Best Images from a Shoot | Whittle DownWIRED

    Steve Winter has been a contributing wildlife photographer with National Geographic for over 20 years. As a wildlife photographer, Winter always has tons of photographs to sift through and eventually whittle down. Watch as Winter lays out how he actually goes about choosing the perfect photograph.

    Read also:Steve Winter Gets Up Close and Personal with a Curious Tiger Using a Robot Rig

    Photos of Animals on Golf Courses _ -- CNN_

    Embed from Getty ImagesSo, you are lining up your putt when an alligator strolls by, and the next time it is a giraffe. Really? Yes, really. The photo never lies!

    Photo of the Week

    Burning the Effigy of the COVID Demon in Managua , Nicaragua

    Embed from Getty Images

    Quiz of the Week

    1.) The Canon EOS 3 was released as a film SLR in 1998 and the Canon EOS R3 **** as a digital mirrorless camera in 2021. Although more than two decades apart, they both have one identical and unique feature, not found in any modern camera. What is it?

    2.) Which is the smallest macro lens for full frame cameras? Hint: It can capture 2X life size.

    3.) The Nikon Z9 can provide uncompressed RAW
    a.) at 20 fps
    b.) at 30 fps
    c.) The Z9 does not save uncompressed RAW files

    Answers

    1.) Eye control autofocus.

    Notable: Is the R3 named from the EOS 3 as it has the same feature? We would love for somebody in the know to respond in the comments below.

    2.) Venus Optics Laowa 85mm f/5.6 2x Ultra Macro APO according to its manufacturer is the smallest. It is available for Nikon Z, Canon RF, Sony E, and Leica M mount.

    3.) (c.) The Nikon Z9 does NOT save uncompressed RAW files. It offers a selection of only lossless compression, High-Efficiency STAR (half the file size), and plain High Efficiency (a third of the file size) options. Nikon states, "New RAW format retains the same high image quality … as conventional RAW files with approximately 1/3 smaller file size."

    Why I Like This PhotoRichard Bernabe

    Giraffe silhouettes reflected in water hole with the last glow of sunset light, Etosha National Park, Namibia © Richard Bernabe

    I like this photo because it evokes a sense of mystery. It isn't obvious what's going on at first, but the image slowly reveals itself as viewers engage it as active, rather than passive, observers.

    This is a tower of giraffes at a water hole shortly after sunset in Namibia's Etosha National Park. There wasn't much in the way of usable data in the shadowy areas of the image where the giraffes were standing, so I let it all go to black, lending itself to the sense of mystery I desired.

    I also liked the balance and spacing of the silhouetted reflections. The giraffe on the far right is "going against the grain" of general leftward energy, which helps provide that balance. There is also almost no merging of reflected silhouettes in the water, so the integrity of their shapes is preserved, which is always important when working with silhouettes. I am always reminded of a Mozart quote about the brief periods of silence between the musical notes being every bit as important as the notes themselves. The same can be said of the spaces between the giraffes and their heads and the near shoreline.

    The image was captured with a Canon EOS 5D Mark III and Canon EF 24-70mm lens.

    Richard Bernabe is an internationally renowned nature, wildlife, and travel photographer, teacher and public speaker. His passion for adventure has been the driving force behind his life's quest to capture the moods and character of the world's most amazing places, from Africa to the Amazon to the Arctic and countless places in between.

    Quote of the WeekDavid Hume Kennerly

    I look at having my picture taken in the same way I look at going to the dentist. Also, I am empathetic with subjects. I know most people don't like it unless you're a professional model.* -- David Hume Kennerly

    *2:04 min in the video above

    _David Hume Kennerly, a Canon Explorer of Light, won the 1972 Pulitzer Prize for his photos of the Vietnam War and then served as President Gerald R. Ford's chief White House photographer. Kennerly was named "One of the 100 Most Important People in Photography" by _American Photo Magazine. He was a contributing photographer for LIFE , then TIME magazines, and later a contributing editor for Newsweek.

    To see an archive of past issues of Great Reads in Photography, click here.

    We welcome comments as well as suggestions. As we cannot possibly cover each and every source, if you see something interesting in your reading or local newspaper anywhere in the world, kindly forward the link to us here. ALL messages will be personally acknowledged.

    About the author : Phil Mistry is a photographer and teacher based in Atlanta, GA. He started one of the first digital camera classes in New York City at The International Center of Photography in the 90s. He was the director and teacher for Sony/Popular Photography magazine’s Digital Days Workshops. You can reach him here.

    Image credits: All photographs as credited and used with permission from the photographers or agencies. Portions of header photo via Depositphotos, middle horizontal (top) giraffe silhouettes © Richard Bernabe, middle horizontal (bottom) Paradise, Mount Rainier National Park © Rebecca Latson.

    #inspiration #news #greatreadsinphotography #grip #philmistry

    Great Reads in Photography: December 26, 2021

    Every Sunday, we bring together a collection of easy-reading articles from analytical to how-to to photo features in no particular order that did not make our regular daily coverage. Enjoy!

    Photographer Sings Christmas Song 🎅

    **Essex, UK, Photographer Light Paints Christmas Scenes **-- BBC

    These complex scenes require multiple photos to be shot and then composited in post. © Kevin Jay

    Photographer Kevin Jay, 50, is certainly using his light painting skills to spread digital Christmas cheer in his hometown of Clacton-on-Sea, England, and surrounding Essex County. He shoots at local landmarks to convey his holiday greetings.

    "Light painting is my favorite area of photography, so I'm always trying to come up with new ideas to try, and holidays such as Xmas or Halloween always offer inspiration for themes and ideas to be created," Jay tells PetaPixel. "Most of the work is done in real-time and created in one shot with very little editing apart from basic corrections."

    The Frinton beach, England, UK, photo was a team effort by Kevin Jay, Nicki Jay and Terry Spires and involved seven separate photos to create the final image. © Kevin Jay

    "Sometimes final photos are made up of a number of single shots like the Xmas scene which took several different shots which were then layered in photoshop," adds Jay. "It would have taken too long to draw them in one exposure with the ambient street lighting. If it's dark enough, I do like to do things in one shot as it feels more authentic that way.

    "I get the most satisfaction from light drawing photography as it's me creating the scene instead of landscape or portrait photography which I also enjoy, but, in those areas, you are capturing what is already there."

    "The snowman shot was a 44-second exposure with me first drawing the snowman then getting out of the way as my friend spun the steel wool from above," says Jay. © Kevin Jay

    Read also: These [Christmas] Light Painting Photographs Were Made Using an Automated Drone

    How to Make Holiday Portraits with a DIY Christmas Tree-Shaped Bokeh Filter!

    **27 Photos to Remind You That 2021 Wasn't Completely Terrible **– BuzzFeed News

    Embed from Getty Images

    **Pantone Unveils Color of the Year for 2022 **-- CNN

    The periwinkle shade is a brand-new edition to Pantone's color library. Courtesy of Pantone Color Institute

    CNN writes:

    On Wednesday, it [Pantone] unveiled Very Peri, a periwinkle hue that the company says combines the steady tranquility of blue with an energetic infusion of red. It's the first time the company has manufactured a color instead of delving into their pre-existing archive, a decision that was a vital element of this year's selection process.

    "It was really important for us to come up with a new color because we have a very new vision of the world now," said Pantone Color Institute's Executive Director Leatrice Eiseman in a video call.

    "It is literally the happiest and the warmest of all the blue hues," she added, describing the shade. "Because of that red undertone, it introduces an empowering feeling of newness, and newness is what we're looking for."

    A Look at the Progression of the Canon Mirrorless Platform -- LensRentals

    Canon R3, courtesy Canon

    Last October marked the 3rd anniversary of the Canon EOS R line of cameras and lenses.

    "The initial announcement of Canon's focus on their mirrorless platform was met with a lot of criticism, as the EF lens mount has become a staple in both the photography and videography worlds," writes LensRentals. "But since that skepticism, Canon has done a lot of great things to propel their RF lens mount forward."

    What I Learned from Photographing my First Wedding – PictureCorrect

    **Legendary Photos: The Stories Behind 7 of Walter Iooss Jr.'s Iconic Images **-- DigitalPhotoPro

    Sports photographer Walter Iooss Jr. shares the stories behind seven of his incredible images of athletes, including Michael Jordan (The Slam Dunk), 1988 and Joe Namath, 1969.

    Notable: Walter Iooss Jr. (b. 1943) has photographed for Sports Illustrated for 58 years, including more than 300 covers.

    Read also:The Story Behind an Iconic Photograph of Michael Jordan in Flight

    Lens Wars: Episode V - Petzval Strikes Back by Roger Cicala – Digital Photography Review

    Jozeph Petzval, 1854.

    Did Voigtländer have lens maker Petzval's house burglarized to steal his lens designs and optical manuscripts?

    Check out the answer as Dr. Roger Cicala tells sordid tales of photographic lens makers of yore in his inimitable style of recounting history at the link above?

    Daguerreotype camera, a replica of Voigtlander's first metal camera from 1841. Exhibit in the Tekniska Museet, Stockholm, Sweden. Daderot, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons

    **Were 48 Pictures of the Sun Used to Make This Image? **-- Snopes

    This photo is just a SAMPLE of an analemma and not the actual one referenced in the article above. Shot from office window of Bell Labs, Murray Hill, NJ, 1998–99. Jfishburn at English Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0

    If a photo is taken of the sun from the same position and the same time of day many times throughout the year and then composited, it will be found that the sun follows a roughly similar path to figure eight. This path or shape is called an "analemma."

    How Street Style Changed in 2021, According to Vogue Runway's Photographers - - Vogue

    **Finding the Most Colorful Places in the World **-- Uswitch

    Cinque Terre, Liguria, Italy, Depositphotos

    Here is a list of the 20 most colorful locations around the world, using color dropping assessment, Google searches, and Instagram hashtags.

    **As Gorbachev Resigned, AP Photographer Snapped Historic Shot **- AP

    Liu Heung Shing worked as The Associated Press Moscow photo chief in 1990-1993. Liu and his AP colleagues won the 1992 Pulitzer Prize for Spot News Photography for documenting the Soviet collapse.

    Photo of the Week

    Do They Still Operate the Red Payphone Booths in England?

    Hover your cursor over the photo for the answer.

    Embed from Getty Images

    Quiz of the Week

    1.) 2021 saw the release of the Sony A1, which achieves a maximum speed of 30fps for still images. Next was the **Canon EOS R3 **which also captures at a maximum rate of 30fps. The Nikon Z9, which came soon after, can record a maximum of
    a.) 60fps
    b.)120fps
    c.) 125fps

    2.) The f-stop is
    a.) the diameter of the opening divided by the focal length of the lens
    b.) the focal length of the lens divided by the diameter of its opening
    c.) the width of the front element divided by the width of the rear element

    3.) The Canon RF100mm f/2.8 Macro lens can close focus at 1.4x life-size. Does that mean it can fill the frame with an object that is
    a.) 17x25mm
    b.) 24x36mm
    c.) 12x18mm

    Answers

    1.) (b.) 120fps. This is with full AF/AE but only at 11-megapixels and not the full resolution of 45.7-megapixels

    2.) (b.) The focal length of the lens divided by the diameter of its opening

    3.) (a.) 17x25mm or 0.67 × 1 inch, approx.

    Why I Like This Photo –Al Bello

    ELMONT, NY - JUNE 10: Jockey John Velazquez is up on Patch during the 149th running of the Belmont Stakes at Belmont Park on June 10, 2017, in Elmont, New York. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images)

    I like this photo because it kind of happened by accident. I was shooting the 149th Belmont Stakes in 2017 and had placed several remote cameras under the rail along the finish line area. My first goal was to get photos of the winning horse and jockey as they crossed the finish line.

    I got photos of the winner, which all worked out fine, but as I looked at all the frames after, I noticed the last place horse named Patch framed perfectly, backlit in the back hoofs of another horse, with dirt flying everywhere, adding drama to the photo. Patch was a sentimental favorite because he had lost one of his eyes due to infection yet still ran the race that day.

    He went on to have a decent career after this race. This is a photo you hope to get but never really happens often, if ever. I remember being quite excited when I saw this photo and even more excited when I saw which horse it was.

    Ahead of the race, I strung several remote cameras together with a hard line that was attached to a foot pedal. As the race ended, I stepped on the foot pedal as the horses crossed the finish line and also shot with my handheld camera at the same time.

    Remote cameras are always secondary to your handhelds. There is a bit of risk involved with using them no matter how much you prepare and set up and check and recheck your remotes throughout the day of a race because anything can go wrong. For example, your cameras can short out due to rain, the frames could be timed incorrectly, or the winning horse could finish outside of your frames altogether or show up out of focus.

    While I say I was kind of lucky to get this shot, I'd also like to think I made my own luck in preparation for it. A lot of work was put into this photo, and I am glad it worked out.

    When a big race is on, and the horses are coming at you all at once, it's very exciting and very tense at the same time, and you hope to get a good shot of the wining horse with your remotes. The challenge with remotes can be the amount of gear involved while setting up across the track, especially if you have to access them during a race. You always have to be on high alert, not interfere with the races or get in the way. It can be very dangerous if you're not careful.

    Al Bello was a linebacker on his HS and College football team, and towards the end of college, he took a photo class. In 1993 Bello landed a position as a junior photographer at Allsport Photo Agency which became part of Getty images in 1998. Bello was the Chief Sports Photographer in North America from 2004-2019 at Getty. In 2020 he changed roles at Getty and is now a Special Sports Correspondent hoping to do more sport photo projects and help develop up and coming sports photographers. He will be covering his 14th Olympic Games this Winter in Beijing, China.

    Quote of the Week –Edward Burtynsky

    Salt Pans #18, Little Rann of Kutch, Gujarat, India, 2016 © Edward Burtynsky, 2021 Sony World Photography Awards

    The above photo is from The Sony World Photography Awards' Outstanding Contribution to Photography given to Edward Burtynsky for 2021.

    Digital photography and Photoshop have made it very easy for people to take pictures. It's a medium that allows a lot of mediocre stuff to get through.* – Edward Burtynsky

    Edward Burtynsky (b. 1955) is a Canadian photographer known for his large-format photographs of industrial landscapes taken over 40 years. Early exposure to the sites and images of the General Motors plant in his hometown helped formulate the development of his photographic work. His imagery explores the collective impact we as a species are having on the surface of the planet, an inspection of the human systems we 've imposed onto natural landscapes.

    To see an archive of past issues of Great Reads in Photography, click here.

    We welcome comments as well as suggestions. As we cannot possibly cover each and every source, if you see something interesting in your reading or local newspaper anywhere in the world, kindly forward the link to us here. ALL messages will be personally acknowledged.

    About the author : Phil Mistry is a photographer and teacher based in Atlanta, GA. He started one of the first digital camera classes in New York City at The International Center of Photography in the 90s. He was the director and teacher for Sony/Popular Photography magazine’s Digital Days Workshops. You can reach him here.

    Image credits: All photographs as credited and used with permission from the photographers or agencies. Portions of header photo via Depositphotos, middle horizontal (bottom) snowman by Kevin Jay.

    #inspiration #news #greatreadsinphotography #grip #philmistry

    Great Reads in Photography: December 19, 2021

    Every Sunday, we bring together a collection of easy-reading articles from analytical to how-to to photo features in no particular order that did not make our regular daily coverage. Enjoy!

    Vivian Maier, Renowned 20th Century Photographer, was Unknown Until her Death in 2009 – NPR

    Embed from Getty ImagesEduardo Kobra's 'Vivian Maier' mural is displayed in the Wicker Park neighborhood in Chicago, Illinois on May 4, 2019

    Don Gonyea speaks with author Ann Marks about her biography documenting Vivian Maier's life as a street photographer who didn't gain notoriety until after she died in 2009.

    Vivian Maier - Is It the Photography That is Great or Her Story?

    “Vivian Maier is an exceptionally popular photographer but is this popularity because she is a good photographer or because of the story surrounding her?” questions UK photographer Alex Kilbee.

    ‘Extremely Rare’ Photograph of the Rossettis Taken by Lewis Carroll up for Auction – The Guardian

    Lewis Carroll (real name Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, 1832-1898) is known as the author of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, but he was also a passionate photographer. He even entertained the idea of making a living out of it in his very early years.

    **Andy Warhol Foundation Asks Supreme Court to Review Prince Pop Art Dispute **– The Hollywood Reporter

    Two of the Warhol artworks based on Goldsmith’s photo. Images from court documents.

    Warhol's estate says there is a "cloud of legal uncertainty over an entire genre of visual art" after an appeals court found his image of Prince to be too visually similar to Lynn Goldsmith's photograph for the difference in their artistic meanings to be legally relevant.

    **Read also:
    ****Photographer Wins Copyright Battle Over Warhol’s Use of Her Photo
    ****Why Warhol’s Use of That Prince Photo WAS Stealing and Not Fair Use
    **Andy Warhol Estate Sues Photog Over Prince Photo Copyright Fight

    Applications Open for the 2022 New York Portfolio Review – The New York Times

    You will need a subscription to access the story.

    From The New York Times:

    Applications are now open for the FREE New York Portfolio Review, produced by The New York Times photo department, Photoville, and Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at the City University of New York.

    This year we are bringing together 80 talented photographers with 80 top photo editors, publishers, curators, and gallery owners for the 9th annual New York Portfolio Review on March 26th and 27th, 2022. This year’s review will be virtual and will occur over Zoom because of ongoing Covid-19 safety concerns.

    All types of photography will be considered. The deadline is Thursday, January 6, 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time.

    20 of the Most Famous Photographs in History – Digital Photo Mentor

    The Steerage, 1907, photo by Alfred Steiglitz

    Check out the link above for 16 more iconic images.

    Nominee William Keo: “Everywhere I Go, I Learn a Little More. There is No Absolute Truth.” – Magnum

    French Photographer William Keo joined Magnum as a nominee in 2021. Here, he shares his photography and route to joining the agency.

    This Gargoyle at the Palencia Cathedral is in the Shape of a Photographer – Atlas Obscura

    Photographer's gargoyle in the Cathedral of Palencia, Castilla y León, Spain.

    The Palencia Cathedral in Spain was built from 1172 to 1504 and stands over a low-vaulted Visigothic crypt (the Crypt of San Antolín).

    “The cathedral’s exterior is lined with a number of striking gargoyles. Among the skeletons and mythical beasts, there is one that seems to be out of place: A curious character in a buttoned cassock juts out from one of the cornices, wearing a camera around his neck,” writes Atlas Obscura.

    How did a relatively modern photographer become a gargoyle on an ancient cathedral? Check out the link above for the answer.

    American Photographer James Van Der Zee’s Remarkable Archive Will Now Live at the Met, in a Unique Partnership With the Studio Museum – Artnet News

    Self-portrait of James Van Der Zee, taken in 1918, courtesy BlackPast.org

    Artnet News writes:

    An extraordinary archive of tens of thousands of printed photographs [ 20,000] and negatives [30,000] created by the pathfinding African American photographer James Van Der Zee (1886–1983) now has a new permanent home.

    The trove, which has been cared for by his widow, Donna Van Der Zee, will now live at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art in a unique partnership with the Studio Museum in Harlem, which has worked with Donna Van Der Zee to oversee the archive for the past 40 years…

    “The James Van Der Zee Archive is a stunning repository of photographic practice in Harlem from the first decade of the 20th century to the early 1980s,” Met curator Jeff L. Rosenheim said in a statement. “Collectively, the photographs offer a hopeful and beautiful portrait of Black life in America.”

    Van Der Zee, who kept a studio in Harlem for around 50 years, bought his first camera at age 14 and started out taking pictures of extended family members at their home in Lenox, Massachusetts.

    Revisiting “Minamata,” W. Eugene Smith’s Final Photo Series – Blind

    Blind writes:

    The new film Minamata starring Johnny Depp, explores the final chapter of Smith’s career. Here, his ex-wife Aileen Smith recounts their extraordinary work…

    On a hot August morning in 1970, a young Japanese woman named Aileen Smith appeared at Smith’s door. The Stanford University student took a summer job before her junior year working as a translator/coordinator for Japanese advertising agency Dentsu, who had hired Smith to do a commercial to promote Fuji color film to the Japanese market…

    About two months after they met, Eugene and Aileen Smith learned of the public health crisis in Minamata…

    It is here, with their decision to travel to Japan to photograph the crisis for Life magazine, that the new film Minamata begins. Directed by Andrew Levitas and starring Johnny Depp and Minami, the 2020 film is based on Smith and Mioko Smith’s 1975 book of the same name, written after they were married. The film chronicles what would become Smith’s final photographic work — a harrowing portrait of environmental disaster driven by corporate greed and the ongoing fight for justice.

    **Agency Photographer of the Year – 2021 Shortlist **– The Guardian

    Embed from Getty Images The Guardian’s team of picture editors highlights the work of some of the photographers whose pictures have stood out in 2021. An overall favorite will be announced towards the end of the year from the shortlist below:

    Felipe Dana, Associated Press.
    Zohra Bensemra
    Emilio Morenatti, Associated Press
    Yasuyoshi Chiba, Agence France-Presse
    Ariana Cubillos
    (late) Danish Siddiqui, Reuters
    Lilian Suwanrumpha, Agence France-Presse
    Brandon Bell, Getty Images
    Fatima Shbair
    Hollie Adams, Getty Images
    Hannah McKay, Reuters
    Christopher Furlong, Getty Images
    Wakil Kohsar, Agence France-Presse

    See 2020’s shortlist and the overall winner – Hector Retamal

    **The Ten Best Photography Books of 2021 **-- Smithsonian

    Cloud Eaters, 2018 © Gulnara Samoilova, photo courtesy Prestel

    The Day May Break by Nick Brandt
    Wonderland by Annie Leibovitz
    Women Street Photographers edited by Gulnara Samoilova

    Check out the link above for seven more titles and full details.

    How to Use a Monochrome Color Palette to Elevate Your Photography – 500px

    Depositphotos

    500px writes:

    If you’re a film buff, you know that some movies revolve around a single color. The Matrix, for example, includes scenes with a signature green hue meant to represent the virtual world. Wes Anderson famously used variations of pink in The Grand Budapest Hotel.

    While “monochromatic” and “black and white” are often used interchangeably in photography, they mean different things. All black and white photographs are monochrome, but not all monochrome photos are black and white. Some examples of images that are monochrome but not black and white would be cyanotypes, with their characteristic Prussian blue or warm sepia photos.

    Check out the link above for five tips to effectively exploit monochrome.

    **9 Photo Stories to Challenge Your View Of The World **– BuzzFeed News

    "These Photos of the Pearl Harbor Attack Are Still Shocking 80 Years Later" — BuzzFeed News

    The wrecked destroyers USS Downes (DD-375) and USS Cassin (DD-372) in Dry Dock No. 1 at the Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard soon after the Japanese air attack ended. Cassin has capsized against Downes. USS Pennsylvania (BB-38) is astern, occupying the rest of the drydock. The torpedo-damaged cruiser USS Helena (CL-50) is in the right distance, beyond the crane. Visible in the center distance is the capsized USS Oklahoma (BB-37), with USS Maryland (BB-46) alongside. The smoke is from the sunken and burning USS Arizona (BB-39), out of view behind Pennsylvania. USS California (BB-44) is partially visible at the extreme left.

    Check out eight more stories at the link above.

    Photo of the Week

    Serbia's Novak Djokovic seems to pass through a kaleidoscope as he arrives to play against Hungary's Marton Fucsovics during their men's singles tennis match on the second day of the ATP Paris Masters in Paris.

    Embed from Getty Images

    Quiz of the Week

    1.) Who was the first African American photographer to receive a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1952?

    2.) Who holds the oldest photography exhibition which has been held almost every year since 1854? Hint: It is a royal event!

    3.) Fluorine coatings are commonly used on the front and rear lens elements
    a.) To make the lens scratch-resistant
    b.) To avoid the adhesion of dust and liquids and make cleaning easier
    c.) To avoid flare
    d.) To improve the transmission of light into and out of the lens

    Answers:

    1.) Roy DeCarava, photographer, distinguished Professor of Art, Hunter College, City University of New York.

    2.) The Royal Photographic Society, which just held its 163rd International Photography Exhibition.

    3.) (b.) To avoid the adhesion of dust and liquids and make cleaning easier.

    Why I Like This Photo –Rick Sammon

    © Rick Sammon

    I like this photo, taken one morning in October 2021 after a major rainstorm, because it shows the power and beauty of the spillway at the New Croton Dam in Westchester, New York. Plus, I was lucky to capture a rainbow created by the mist.

    The key to why this photograph works, for me, is the way in which the water flows through the scene – not only how a slow shutter speed (1.5 seconds) softened the movement of the water, but also how the water is flowing in three different directions: 1) toward the viewer, 2) down and to the left over the spillway, and 3) slightly to the right over the rocks at the bottom of the frame. The result: a still photograph with a lot of movement.

    The contrast of the scene, from the bright white water in the spillway to the beautiful dark blue water in the Croton Reservoir, also adds interest and impact to the scene.

    To capture this view, I used my Canon EOS R3 with Canon RF15-35mm lens set at 15mm . . . for a super-wide view. Because I wanted a slow shutter speed and because it was a bright, sunny day, I used my Breakthrough Photography 10-stop Neutral Density filter. And, because I wanted the scene to look as it looked to my eyes (everything in focus), I set an aperture of f/22 for maximum depth of field. For a steady shot, I set my camera on my Really Right Stuff tripod.

    As an aside, on my walk toward this vantage point, I joked to a passing photographer, who had a large camera backpack over his shoulder and who was toting a professional tripod, “I hope you did not take all the good photos and left a few for me.” He responded, “The sun is too high, and light is not right. I am sorry, but you’re too late, and you missed the best light.”

    I took this photograph about five minutes after that encounter.

    Finally, I have photographed the New Croton Dam (which is about five minutes from my home) countless times over 30 years. Each time I go to the Dam, I make a promise to myself that I am not to come home without a different type of picture -- using a different composition or different exposure, or shooting at a different time of day, or processing the photograph in a new way.

    So, here’s a quick tip: Go back to the same spot over and over and over again and promise yourself that you will make a different type of photograph. Giving yourself this challenge will make you a better photographer, I promise.

    Canon Explorer of Light Rick Sammon has photographed in more than 100 countries. He is the author of 41 photo books. His most recent releases: Photo Therapy Motivation and Wisdom – Discovering the Power of Pictures, and Photo Quest – Discovering Your Photographic and Artistic Voice are available at amazon.com.

    Quote of the Week -- Gilles Peress

    © Gilles Peress, courtesy Steidl

    “I don’t trust words. I trust pictures.”— Gilles Peress

    Photo from Whatever You Say, Say Nothing by Gilles Peress, published by Steidl

    Gilles Peress was born in 1946 in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France. He moved to New York in 1974 and began a series of interrelated projects that pushed the formal and conceptual possibilities of photography to interrogate the structure of history and the nature of intolerance. The resulting cycle of interlocking narratives in books and on walls encompasses eight monographs. It has been widely exhibited (at the Museum of Modern Art and MoMA PS1, New York, and Centre Pompidou in Paris) and collected.

    To see an archive of past issues of Great Reads in Photography, click here.

    We welcome comments as well as suggestions. As we cannot possibly cover each and every source, if you see something interesting in your reading or local newspaper anywhere in the world, kindly forward the link to us here. ALL messages will be personally acknowledged.

    About the author : Phil Mistry is a photographer and teacher based in Atlanta, GA. He started one of the first digital camera classes in New York City at The International Center of Photography in the 90s. He was the director and teacher for Sony/Popular Photography magazine’s Digital Days Workshops. You can reach him here.

    Image credits: All photographs as credited and used with permission from the photographers or agencies. Portions of header photo via Depositphotos, middle horizontal (top) Lia © Mary Berridge and middle horizontal (bottom) New Croton Dam © Rick Sammon.

    #inspiration #news #greatreadsinphotography #grip #philmistry

    Great Reads in Photography: December 12, 2021

    Every Sunday, we bring together a collection of easy-reading articles from analytical to how-to to photo features in no particular order that did not make our regular daily coverage. Enjoy!

    ' Most People Don 't Know How to Shoot or Edit Dark Skin ' – Isaac West 's Best Phone Shot The Guardian

    Isaac West, Untitled, from IN LOVE, 2021. © Isaac West

    The above photo is from INWARD: Reflections on Interiority at the International Center of Photography (ICP) in New York City.

    "I love shooting dark-skinned models," West says. "The secret is in the editing. Most people don't know how to shoot or edit dark skin – they don't get the tone right. I want to see contrast, rawness and richness. – The Guardian

    "I chose the yellow cloth because I wanted the dark skin to bounce off it," adds West.

    The iPhone 13 Pro Got a Big Camera Upgrade – But Users Didn 't Like it TechRadar

    iPhone 13 Pro and iPhone 13 Pro Max, courtesy Apple

    TechRadar writes:

    When Apple designed the new iPhone 13 camera app, it hoped to improve on past handsets by learning from oil painting techniques – but did it really make things better?

    Wallpaper* writes that "The iPhone 13's camera represents a substantial upgrade, with Pro models getting a triple-lens system with a macro mode and 6x optical zoom [from 0.5x ultra-wide to 3x telephoto zoom]…

    Since the iPhone 13 has launched, a number of users have taken to forum threads to express their discontent with the photos taken by the iPhone 13 Pro and iPhone 13 Pro Max – largely around processing that smoothes out the picture and loses important detail.

    Greenpeace: Half a Century on the Frontline of Environmental Photo Activism – The Guardian

    Roberta F., CC BY-SA 3.0

    The Guardian writes:

    Fifty years ago, on 15 September 1971, a ship named the Greenpeace set out to confront and stop US nuclear weapons testing at Amchitka, one of the Aleutian Islands in south-west Alaska.

    Two years later, a small boat called the Vega…sailed into the French nuclear test site area at Moruroa, French Polynesia in the southern Pacific Ocean. Photographers had been using their images for years to publicize situations worldwide. But Greenpeace was a young organization pioneering a new kind of activism: this was the moment they began to realize that capturing images of what they were doing and seeing would play a vital role in their work…

    Greenpeace – the pioneer of photo activism – has remained committed to its core values of exposing environmental injustice through its imagery for the last 50 years.

    98-Year-Old NYC Photographer Shows Life as Is – From WWII to Today -- Voice of America (VOA)

    Tony Vaccaro (b. 1922) photographed Europe during 1944 and 1945 and Germany immediately following World War II. After the war, he worked as a fashion, celebrity, and lifestyle photographer for Flair and Look before joining Life magazine.

    Vaccaro wanted to work as a photographer at the Army Signal Corps, but he was rejected as he was deemed too young at age 21 when he was drafted just a few months after graduating high school. So, he worked just as an infantryman and surreptitiously captured over 8,000 photographs during the war on a smuggled Argus C3 camera.

    _Read also:
    _
    Tony Vaccaro Shares His Story and Images from D-Day and the Weeks that Followed
    This Famous WWII Photographer Just Beat COVID-19 at 97 Years Old

    How Many Bobcats Can You Spot in this Wisconsin Trail Camera Photo? – The Sacramento Bee

    This trail camera photo taken by the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources shows bobcats camouflage themselves in their environment to become skilled stalkers.

    The image was posted on Dec. 4 on Facebook with a challenge. "There are two bobcats in this snapshot from Lincoln County! Can you find both?"

    Hint: Look in the tree.

    A Soviet Spy Camera for Shooting Through Walls – KosmoFoto

    A rare Soviet camera, the C166 Nimfa-3, featuring a Zorki-4 rangefinder attached to a special lens assembly intended to take covert surveillance photos through walls or ceilings through drilled holes, is being offered for sale this week.

    The Nimfa-3 was one of several modified rangefinder cameras adapted for this specialist role for use by Soviet-aligned security agencies such as the KGB. The KGB and sister agencies in the Warsaw Pact used an impressive array of specialist cameras, some of which were hidden in fake bags, umbrellas or even jackets. – Kosmo Foto

    Jill Freedman's Street Cops Shows Seedy NYC in the '70s and '80s – DigitalPhotoPro

    © Jill Freedman

    Photojournalist Jill Freedman's (1939–2019) pioneering photo book, Street Cops, published by Setanta Books, shows what it was like to police New York City during the rough-and-tumble 1970s and 80s. Freedman, who passed away two years ago at the age of 79, tagged along with the NYPD during this volatile period in the city's history, capturing murders, arrests, and the everyday life of being a cop on the beat.

    © Jill Freedman

    Inevitably, the spirit of Weegee haunts Jill Freedman's photographs of New York street cops. Both worked in inky, matter-of-fact black and white. Both wanted to be at the scene of the crime while the blood was still wet. Both were unsentimental, tenacious, and tough. They didn't look away, and they won't let us ignore what they saw: New York at its rawest and scuzziest – The New Yorker.

    © Jill Freedman

    I'm not even sure this kind of work would be possible today, given how our institutions, including the police, so tightly control access. But in Street Cops, Freedman takes us along as she photographs the NYPD responding to everything from crazy violent drunks to domestic disputes to crowd control during parades. It's a wild ride through a city that has always captured our imaginations. – The Washington Post

    © Jill Freedman

    In seven books and numerous gallery exhibitions and journalism assignments, she specialized in finding people on the rough margins of American life, rendering them as noble but not necessarily heroic. Even when her subjects were freakish or odd, Ms. Freedman never traded in oddity for its own sake; viewers might laugh with the characters, but not at them. – The New York Times in her obituary.

    Also, Cop a Load of this: on the Beat with the NYPD – in Pictures – The Guardian

    My Favorite Things I Learned About Photography in 2021 – Photography Life

    1.) NPF Rule, which is a formula for what shutter speed to use to avoid motion blur in the stars at night.
    2.) An unexpected benefit of image averaging

    And three more at the link above.

    6 Surprising Benefits of Shooting Street Photography – MakeUseOf

    Depositphotos

    1.) You become a better and faster photographer
    2.) Become an expert of your city and offer photography workshops

    Check out four more benefits at the link above.

    Read Also:
    Things I’ve Learned Over 10 Years of Street Photography
    Here’s a Free 30-Minute Masterclass on Street Photography by Nick Turpin

    Photoshop Fails on Iconic Movie Posters You Never Noticed Before – Buzzfeed

    It takes a lot of hard work to make a movie happen, but that's why we have talented directors, actors, and writers. It's also difficult to spot minuscule mistakes in the posters for those movies, but that's why we have the internet!

    In Street Kings, if you look carefully, Keanu Reeves’ finger is not even on the trigger, but the gun is firing with muzzle flash visible.

    Try to look at each poster and spot the Photoshop fail before you read the answers in the bold text at the link above.

    Here Are 24 Photo Books That Brought Us Meaning and Joy In 2021 – Buzzfeed News

    © Nick Meyer, courtesy Mack

    The above photo is from The Local by photographer Nick Meyer published by Mack.

    © Joseph Rodríguez, courtesy The Artist Edition.

    The above photo is from LAPD 1994 by photographer Joseph Rodríguez published by The Artist Edition.

    Marsel Van Oosten: Why Color Can be a Distraction in Wildlife Photography – Amateur Photographer

    © Marsel van Oosten, courtesy teNeues.

    The above image is from Mother by Marsel van Oosten published by teNeues.

    Photographer Edward Burtynsky on Creating Immersive Experiences and How to Find Your Aesthetic Voice in a World Flooded with ImagesArtnet News

    #2, Lagos, Nigeria, 2016 © Edward Burtynsky, 2021 Sony World" />Saw Mills #2, Lagos, Nigeria, 2016 © Edward Burtynsky, 2021 Sony World

    Artnet News writes:

    Canadian artist Edward Burtynsky is sort of like a sleuth: He produces evidence of humans' impact on the planet. Gaining access to hard-to-reach places in our world—tar sands, nickel mines, sawmills, or shipyards—Burtynsky culls poignant imagery to show us how we have transformed the earth around us at a vast and debilitating scale. There is a cost to modern life, and its massive, if usually just out of view.

    At a time when the climate is finally starting to rear from the effects of industry, his work has become even more urgent. It is no great surprise then the artist, who is based in Toronto, was recently awarded this year's Outstanding Contribution to Photography by the World Photography Organization [Sony World Photography Awards 2022.]

    Phosphor Tailings Pond #4, Near Lakeland, Florida, USA, 2012 © Edward Burtynsky, 2021 Sony World Photography Awards

    Read also:An Interview with Edward Burtynsky

    6 Copyright Infringement Cases Photographers Should Know About -- Rangefinder

    You will need to sign up to read the article, but it is free.

    **William Klein 's Photos Ignore 'The Rules' (Learn From Them) -- **The Photographic Eye

    William Klein, age 93, is an American-born French photographer and filmmaker noted for his ironic approach to both media and his extensive use of unusual photographic techniques in photojournalism and fashion photography.

    Read also:Documentary: The Life and Work of Iconic Photographer William Klein

    Photo From the Past – Smog in Lahore, Pakistan

    Embed from Getty ImagesA Pakistani barber shaves a customer alongside a road amid heavy fog and smog conditions in Lahore on January 24, 2019.

    Lahore, Pakistan, Beats Delhi, India, as World 's Most Polluted City (Nov 2021) – FirstPost

    Photo of the Week

    Look Ma, No Hands?

    Embed from Getty Images

    Quiz of the Week

    1.) Which World War II photographer developed his film in helmets while crouching in foxholes on moonless nights and hung the negatives to dry on tree branches?

    2.) Which Magnum photographer did a photo story on the fake news industry in Macedonia and fooled the photographic community with fake computer-generated imagery? Hint: He did finally reveal the truth.

    3.) Which phone has the same 1″ camera sensor as a point and shoot camera? Hint: It doesn't make full use of the sensor's actual size, of 20.1-megapixels but only 12-megapixels.

    Answers:

    1.) Tony Vaccaro (see the video above, 4th from top). His iconic—and unauthorized—representations led the BBC to describe Vaccaro as the war's greatest combat photographer.

    2.) Jonas Bendiksen with his The Book of Veles.

    3.) Sony Xperia Pro-I has the same 1-inch Type Exmor RS BSI CMOS sensor as the Sony RX100 VII camera. It also has a two-stop variable aperture of f/2.0 and f/4.0 that the user controls and a 6.5-inch 4K resolution (3840 x 1644) OLED screen with a 120Hz refresh rate.

    Why I Like This Photo –Jack Crager

    Keep This Far Apart © Jack Crager

    I like this photograph because it encapsulates a certain place and time: New York City in the spring of 2020, at the outset of the COVID -19 pandemic. The 6-feet arrows indicate the full length of proper social distance, even outdoors, and this sign is on a running trail around the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Reservoir in Central Park.

    At the time, running represented freedom, as exercise was considered "essential." (Just ask my wife: My "runs" might last for hours.) With no other people, an iron fence, a stretch of water, and distant buildings—on a gorgeous day—the scene conveys desolation with a tinge of hope.

    I shot this photograph on an old iPhone SE using automatic settings. I probably ran all the way around the reservoir, but I ended up shooting on the west side (nearest my home), looking toward the buildings on the east side (mostly hospitals and luxury high-risers). I remember searching for an angle that would include the vibrant colors—the blue sky, the aqua water, the green trees, the red sign backlit by the sun.

    I also wanted a very horizontal shot to serve as my lead picture: This was made for a photo essay, During a Lockdown, What is "Essential?", published on the website Common Edge. The text was about being an essential worker at a popular grocery store as Covid was spreading like wildfire through the city. The essay hit a chord: It's the closest I've had to a creation going viral (at least in my little realm of the world).

    Afterwards, a lot of old friends wrote to me, giving me a chance to reply and reconnect—a dose of kinship amid the quarantine. We shared memories and commiserated about living and coping with this wild, crazy virus. The one that won't go away.

    Jack Crager is a freelance journalist and photographer for more than 20 years in New York City. His client list includes American Photo, Popular Photography, Time Out New York, Graphis, New York Road Runners, Metropolis, Voxnovus, PDN, Rangefinder, Emerging Photographer and others. He's a father, husband, songwriter and marathoner.

    Quote of the Week – Jill Freedman

    Gun Play, © Jill Freedman, courtesy Setanta Books.

    The above photo is from Street Cops, by Jill Freedman published by Setanta Books.

    I hate cheap pictures. I hate pictures that make people look like they're not worth much, just to prove a photographer's point. I hate when they take a picture of someone pickin' their nose or yawning. It's so cheap. A lot of it is a big ego trip. You use people as props instead of as people.* -- Jill Freedman

    • Working, book 3, by Studs Terkel (1973)

    Jill Freedman (1939–2019) was an American documentary and street photographer. At age seven, she found old Life magazines from the war that her parents had saved in the attic. Those photos deeply influenced her and probably led to her being a photographer. Freedman, a self-taught artist, only ever had one real photography teacher: Fang, the poodle. "When I was out walking in the street with Fang, I saw everything, felt everything. He had a great instinct. He taught me how to look because he never missed a thing," writes The Eye of Photography.

    To see an archive of past issues of Great Reads in Photography, click here.

    We welcome comments as well as suggestions. As we cannot possibly cover each and every source, if you see something interesting in your reading or local newspaper anywhere in the world, kindly forward the link to us here. ALL messages will be personally acknowledged.

    About the author : Phil Mistry is a photographer and teacher based in Atlanta, GA. He started one of the first digital camera classes in New York City at The International Center of Photography in the 90s. He was the director and teacher for Sony/Popular Photography magazine’s Digital Days Workshops. You can reach him here.

    Image credits: All photographs as credited and used with permission from the photographers or agencies. Portions of header photo via Depositphotos. Middle horizontal (top) LAPD 1994 by photographer Joseph Rodríguez published by The Artist Edition, and middle horizontal (bottom) Greenpeace ship by Roberta F., CC BY-SA 3.0

    #inspiration #news #greatreadsinphotography #grip #philmistry

    Great Reads in Photography: December 5, 2021

    Every Sunday, we bring together a collection of easy-reading articles from analytical to how-to to photo features in no particular order that did not make our regular daily coverage. Enjoy!

    Intimate Perspectives on North Korea by Fabian Muir – in Pictures _– The Guardian
    _

    North Koreans pay respects to monumental statues of Kim Il-sung (left) and Kim Jong-il (right) at the Mansudae Grand Monument, Pyongyang. The background mosaic depicts Mount Paektu, the birthplace of Kim Jong-il according to local lore and a site of almost mystical significance for North Koreans. Pyongyang residents visit the monument on national holidays and special occasions such as weddings. Visitors who come from the provinces will make a point of seeing it at least once, in many cases laying flowers at the feet of the former leaders. © Fabian Muir/Courtesy Head On Photo festival

    Australian photographer Fabian Muir's photographs from inside North Korea give a peek into the lifestyle of a secluded nation.

    "Documented over two years, the images reveal a complexity and nuance residing in their society," writes The Guardian.

    Children in Nampo orphanage are lined up beneath Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il portraits. © Fabian Muir/Courtesy Head On Photo festival

    Muir is principally motivated in his projects by visual storytelling focusing on humanist issues.

    A girl gives a performance accompanied by a teacher (or two) in a junior school in the northeastern port town of Chongjin. Many assume such performances are put on only for the benefit of foreigners. However, Chongjin sees almost no travelers, and such shows are, in fact, a feature at schools throughout the country, where musical talent is identified and pushed from an early age. © Fabian Muir/Courtesy Head On Photo festival

    Muir's exhibition is showing for the first time at the Head On photo festival in Sydney, Australia.

    50 Years Ago, a Californian Saved 70,000 Acres of Redwoods. Now he Wants to Photograph the Park he Helped Preserve -- Upworthy

    Redwood Forest Depositphotos

    In June of 1963, as a fresh-faced twenty-year-old, Dave Van de Mark traveled from Southern California to work at a sawmill in Humboldt County. That summer dramatically changed his life and set Dave on a path that helped establish one of America's most beloved national parks.

    "On only my second day on the job, I inquired as to where the trees being milled came from," Dave tells Upworthy. "I was quickly told I shouldn't ask such questions!"

    Intrigued by his co-workers' evasive responses, Dave began looking for his own answers.

    Johnny Depp Movie Minamata Featuring Photographer W. Eugene Smith is Finally Getting a U.S. Release _ -- Deadline_

    Embed from Getty ImagesThe Johnny Depp movie Minamata finally gets a North American release in theaters beginning December 15.

    Deadline writes:

    Minamata charts the true story of acclaimed war photographer W. Eugene Smith (played by Depp), who traveled back to Japan in the 1970s to document the devastating effect of mercury poisoning in local communities by a major corporation that dumped chemicals into their waterways.

    This update comes after the film's director, Andrew Levitas, complained earlier this year that MGM was "burying" Minamata due to Depp's well-publicized off-screen issues.

    **Bryan Adams Dedicates Pirelli's 2022 Calendar to 'The Great Stars of Music' **-- CNN

    [

    View this post on Instagram

    ](https://www.instagram.com/p/CW3sci3MQ8q/?utm_source=ig_embed&utm_campaign=loading)

    A post shared by Bryan Adams (@bryanadams)

    From CNN:

    Pirelli has unveiled On the Road, its 2022 [48th edition] calendar starring some of the music industry's biggest names, including Iggy Pop, Cher, Grimes and Jennifer Hudson. This edition of the renowned calendar, which was put on pause last year due to the coronavirus, was shot by Canadian singer-turned-photographer Bryan Adams

    "On the road is where I have been for the last 45 years," Adams said in the statement, "because the life of a musician is made up of roads, travel, waiting in hotels, hours backstage."

    Since 1964, the Pirelli Calendar has been interpreted by a total of 37 photographers -- including Annie Leibovitz, Mario Testino and Herb Ritts [1952-2002]- and has featured an impressive roster of talent, such as models Kate Moss and Naomi Campbell and actors Sophia Loren and Maggie Cheung. For the 2017 calendar, Peter Lindbergh [1944-2019] captured a throng of Hollywood actors, including Uma Thurman and Kate Winslet, in a series of stripped-back, black-and-white portraits

    Adams himself closes the calendar with an aviator-clad self-portrait and the wistful kicker: "On the way to the next show."

    Read also:Rock Star Bryan Adams is Photographing the 2022 Pirelli Calendar

    **See Photos of the White House's Christmas Decorations on Google Street View **-- Engadget

    Are you ready for the holidays?! This year, we’re bringing the White House to you.💕

    Come on in and explore this season’s decor in 360° with @googlemaps Street View. <https://t.co/ZCo62vY9aI> pic.twitter.com/MTDRQKqrjK

    — Jill Biden (@FLOTUS) December 3, 2021

    From Engadget:

    You can now take a tour of the White House's halls decked with Christmas trees and other decor fit for the season — virtually, that is. Google first added the official residence of the President of the United States to the places you can visit on Street View almost a decade ago. But now, you can take a virtual walk of its premises to see how the place has been decorated…

    According to The Hill, tours of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. are currently not available to the public due to the COVID-19 pandemic, so these virtual experiences may be the only way you can get a glimpse of its decorations for the holidays.

    The White House is only one of the many historic sites you can visit on Street View — there's also Chile's Palacio de la Moneda, the Taj Mahal, the Pyramids of Giza, the Palace of Versailles, and the Colosseum, among others.

    'I Pick Up Whatever's Around': Watch Photographer Sally Mann and Her Family Reflect on How Their Everyday Lives Became Art – ArtNet News

    Read also:NPR Interviews Sally Mann: A Discussion About Her Life and Controversial Photography

    **St. Louis to Pay $115k to Photographer Caught in Police Kettle **– St. Louis Post-Dispatch

    Apple 'Pinch to Zoom' Can't Add Things That Aren't There -- Forbes

    Depositphotos

    Forbes writes:

    There's been a lot of confusion in the news recently about what, exactly, Apple's "pinch to zoom" gesture can do.

    To hear some tell it, zooming in on an image employs the use of nefarious AI that can alter images and add things that aren't even part of the original image on the fly without you even knowing it. All for some dark corporate purpose known only to Tim Cook.

    Stepping back from the Black Mirror elements of this story for a second, I want to talk about the actual tech in play here and what it can actually do.

    The answer is stunningly boring.

    **Slow-Mo and Fake Rain: Inside the World of Chinese Wedding Photography **– Our Community Now

    The Ultimate Guide to Memory Cards _– Amateur Photographer
    _

    Does 95MB/s refer to the read speed or write speed in this card? What is the ten enclosed in a C symbol? What is the difference between the V30 and the 3 enclosed in the U? All of these numbers refer to the card's speed, but which is the most important? Photo by Erik Mclean

    Memory Cards have their own lingo. Cards can be: SD, microSD, CFexpress (Type A or B), XQD and more.

    Some cameras will have dual slots, with each slot taking a different type of card. But the most important and confusing part of any card is its speed rating. Some cards may have as many as four different numbers and signs on the face of card, with all of them mentioning the speed at which it reads or writes. Remember that the read speed will often be higher than the write speed, which is the more important number. The read speed is the maximum speed the card will transfer the image files to the computer. The write speed is the maximum speed at which the card will write the image files in the camera.

    Award-Winning Israeli Photographer Urges Wildlife Protection Through his Lens – The Times of Israel

    Depositphotos

    Tel Aviv-based photographer Roie Galitz, who is drawn to frozen landscapes, warns that the disappearance of polar bears is the world's "canary in the coalmine."

    "Asked why people should care about the extinction of polar bears thousands of miles away, he answers that they are apex predators and keystone species — creatures that help define an entire ecosystem — and that if they are removed, the whole chain of life is affected," writes The Times of Israel. "Countries such as Iceland and the United Kingdom will feel the impact, he says, because, with more seals in the oceans, there will be less fish."

    Tim Flach's New Book of Extraordinary Bird Portraits – Amateur Photographer

    Inca Tern. For these comical-looking birds, an exquisite handlebar mustache is an advertisement for good health. These terns can only grow out their plumes while molting like all other birds. This allows them to use the unique facial feathers to assess the fitness of prospective mates. Since growing a pair of long ornamental feathers requires a surplus of food, birds with longer mustaches are better at feeding themselves and are therefore likely to be better at raising young. © Tim Flach, courtesy Abrams

    From Amateur Photographer:

    Many of the images in this series were shot in the controlled environment of the studio. But Tim [Flach] would argue that even images captured in the wild have some element of "management" to them. "It's the degree of which the mythology is perpetuated," he says.

    "Sometimes, when you're trying to deal with a bird that is in an aviary that is some distance away and doesn't have too much human contact, it can be more challenging than tracking down a lion in Maasai Mara, which is photographed by tourists every day."

    …for most of the work, he [Flach] used a Canon EOS 5DS – its 50.6-million-pixel resolution being ideal for the kind of highly detailed imagery that avian work demands.

    A few were shot on a Hasselblad, while towards the end of the project, he switched to using the Canon EOS R5, a mirrorless camera, which gave him the benefit of Canon's extraordinarily powerful Animal Eye AF capability.

    Knobbed Hornbill. The breathtakingly beautiful bill of the knobbed hornbill results from colored pigments in the keratin coating. A bill is not a solid structure but rather a hollow bony outgrowth of the skull sheathed in a thin layer of keratin—the same protein found in our fingernails. Unlike us, birds can deposit colored pigments into the protein matrix as it grows. © Tim Flach Gentoo Penguins. While penguins may be flightless, they are well adapted for flying through the water. Using its vestigial wings as paddles, its rear-set feet as propellers, and its stiffened tail feathers as rudders, the gentoo penguin can drive its torpedo-shaped body through the water at more than 22 miles (35 km) per hour—the fastest speed recorded by any swimming bird. © Tim Flach

    Birds is published by Abrams.

    **New Title by Photographer Steve McCurry Contains Striking Photos of Children Taken Throughout His Career **– Daily Mail

    Father takes his children home from a trip to the market, Maymana, Afghanistan, 2003 © Steve McCurry

    From Daily Mail:

    American photographer Steve McCurry has produced a legendary body of work over the past five decades that includes truly mesmerizing photographs of children.

    The publisher says: "Throughout his long career, McCurry has taken incredible photographs of children, each one managing to hint at an epic story.

    "In Stories and Dreams , he brings a unique selection of images of children from 46 countries, from Jaipur [India] to Rome. The new contemplative and sensitive title features some previously unpublished images which span the length of McCurry's storied career."

    Boys pretend to play homemade guitars, Havana, Cuba, 2015 © Steve McCurry Children play on an abandoned antiaircraft gun in Beirut, Lebanon, 1982 © Steve McCurry Three young girls take part in the Holy Week celebration, Province of Enna, Sicily, Italy, 2011 © Steve McCurry

    Stories and Dreams is published by Laurence King Publishing.

    Also, **Monsoons and Makeshift Bikes: Childhood Resilience in Pictures **– The Guardian

    **The W. Eugene Smith Fund Flash Print Sale **_– Rangefinder
    _

    Skid Row, Los Angeles, 2015 © Darcy Padilla

    Since 1979, the W. Eugene Smith Fund has presented more than $1 million to documentary photographers worldwide, with many going on to become some of the most legendary documentary photographers of our time. To help raise funds for future grant recipients, many of these photographers have donated photos for this year's W. Eugene Smith Fund annual print sale.

    The Spinner, Spanish Village, 1951. © 2021 The Heirs of W. Eugene Smith

    Donna Ferrato, Eugene Richards, Matt Eich, Darcy Padilla, Moises Saman, Peter van Agtmael, and Eugene Smith (archives) are only a few of the renowned photographers represented in this year's print sale.

    A plane flies over students at an amusement park, Istanbul, 2018. © Sabiha Çimen/Magnum

    The W. Eugene Smith Memorial Fund 2021 Print Sale

    Historical Photo of the Week: 1929 Macy 's Thanksgiving Parade

    Were balloons from the Macy's Thanksgiving Parade ever released after the parade?
    Did the helium-filled balloons drift for a week?
    Was there a $100 reward in the late 1920s for their recovery?

    Hover your cursor over the photo to see the answers in the caption.

    Embed from Getty ImagesAlso, Macy 's Thanksgiving Day Parade: A History in Pictures _– JstorDaily
    _(In 1927, the parade replaced live animals from the Central Park Zoo with helium balloons designed by puppeteer Tony Sarg.)

    Photo of the Week

    **Is this the red planet of Mars or Israel?
    **Hover your cursor over the photo for full details in the caption.

    Embed from Getty Images

    Quiz of the Week

    1.) The Canon EOS R3 sports 1,053 phase-detection autofocus points that cover:
    a.) 85% of the frame
    b.) 100% of the frame
    c.) 106% of the frame to cover shift lenses

    2.) If you wish to photograph close-ups of fast-moving bees in nature and are using a regular telephoto lens (not macro), which device will give you better auto focus?
    a.) Screw-in close-up lenses on the front
    b.) Extension tubes

    3.) Anybody who has shot 35mm film knows that a film slide is 24x36mm or 1.4″ wide, and therefore a full-frame sensor is also 36mm wide. How wide is:
    (a.) APS-C
    (b) Micro Four Thirds

    Answers:

    1.) (b.) 100% of the frame

    2.) (b.) Extension tubes

    If you disagree, please let us know your experience in the comments below.

    __ 3.) (a.) APS-C: 24mm or 0.95″
    (b.) Micro Four Thirds: 17mm or 0.7″

    Quote of the Week –Donna Ferrato

    Who Runs the World? We Do., 1987. After Mary's husband, Lawson, held a shotgun to her head and threatened to blow it off, Mary took her three daughters and ran to a shelter. Charged with assault, Lawson was given two days in jail, a $165 fine, and a year's probation. © Donna Ferrato

    The above photo is from The W. Eugene Smith Memorial Fund 2021 Print Sale

    It's very tough for documentary photographers these days. We're the dinosaurs… Today, if you want to be a documentary photographer, you have to be prepared to put in your own money, your own time, and also be doing this for yourself. It's a famine time for photographers out there. (2002) -- Donna Ferrato

    **Donna Ferrato **is an internationally acclaimed photojournalist known for her groundbreaking documentation of the hidden world of domestic violence. Her seminal book Living With the Enemy (Aperture, 1991) went into four printings and sparked a national discussion on sexual violence and women's rights. Her new book, Holy, published in 2020, is a call to action. It proclaims the sacredness of women's rights and their power to be masters of their own destiny.

    To see an archive of past issues of Great Reads in Photography, click here.

    We welcome comments as well as suggestions. As we cannot possibly cover each and every source, if you see something interesting in your reading or local newspaper anywhere in the world, kindly forward the link to us here. ALL messages will be personally acknowledged.

    About the author : Phil Mistry is a photographer and teacher based in Atlanta, GA. He started one of the first digital camera classes in New York City at The International Center of Photography in the 90s. He was the director and teacher for Sony/Popular Photography magazine’s Digital Days Workshops. You can reach him here.

    Image credits: All photographs as credited and used with permission from the photographers or agencies. Portions of header photo via Depositphotos. Middle horizontal (top) Stories and Dreams published by Laurence King Publishing, and middle horizontal (bottom) from Birds published by Abrams.

    #inspiration #news #greatreadsinphotography #grip #philmistry

    Great Reads in Photography: November 28, 2021

    Every Sunday, we bring together a collection of easy-reading articles from analytical to how-to to photo features in no particular order that did not make our regular daily coverage. Enjoy!

    Ernest C. Withers ' Images of Black Life in the American South – Blind

    Thursdays, called Maids Day Off, Overton Park Zoo, Memphis © The Ernest C. Withers Family Trust; courtesy CityFiles Press.

    Ernest C. Withers was a former police officer turned photojournalist from the Civil Rights era.

    Working at a time when mainstream American publications rarely hired Black photographers, Dr. Ernest C. Withers, Sr. (1922 – 2007) made a way. His new book The Revolution in Black and White: Photographs of the Civil Rights Era (CityFiles Press) looks at Black life in the American South during the height of the Civil Rights Movement.

    A Father and Daughter's Main Street March © The Ernest C. Withers Family Trust; courtesy CityFiles Press.

    One of the early civil rights marches down Main Street in Memphis, Tennessee was for fathers and daughters only. It was hoped the presence of young girls might reduce the chance of violence against protesters. In later life, Renee Andrewnetta Jones, who was eight months old at the time of this famous picture, looked back on the events in which she had been an unwitting participant. She had grown up to become a pediatrician in Memphis. – Fahey Klein Gallery

    I Am a Man, Sanitation Workers Strike, Memphis, TN, 1968 © The Ernest C. Withers Family Trust; courtesy CityFiles Press.

    Blind reports:

    Hailing from Memphis, Tennessee, Williams became one of the first nine Black police officers to join the force in 1948 after serving in the Pacific Theater during World War II. Although Withers was given a uniform, patrol car, and gun, he was forbidden to patrol white communities or arrest white folks. His power was proscribed strictly within the confines of Black Memphis during the height of segregation.

    Off duty, Withers photographed the same community, documenting the fabled Beale Street music scene, the birthplace of Memphis Blues icons like B. B. King. After getting caught selling liquor illegally, Withers left the force to work as a freelance photographer…[shooting for] legendary photo magazines Ebony and Jet while working as Stax Records' official photographer for 20 years.

    But in 2010, under the Freedom of Information Act, the FBI released documents indicating that Withers began working as an informant shortly after making his first photograph of Dr. King in 1956 — a revelation that was said to be both shocking but not surprising.

    B.B. King performing on stage at The Hippodrome, Beale Street in Memphis, TN, c.1950 © The Ernest C. Withers Family Trust, courtesy CityFiles Press.

    Read also: Iconic Civil Rights Photographer Exposed as FBI Informant

    How Photographer Jeff Wall 's Pictures Duplicate 'Magic' of Large-Scale Paintings – NPR

    Jeff Wall’s current show at Glenstone in Potomac, Md., is the largest U.S. survey of his career in almost 15 years. It shows his photographs or “pictures” as he refers to them in the video above, as they were meant to be seen, as backlit transparencies often 9-10 feet wide.

    “When you see one of Jeff Wall’s large-format photographs reproduced in a book or newspaper, detail is lost,” writes The Washington Post . “That’s inevitable…That loss underscores how essential scale is to Wall’s work…

    “Wall emerged as an artist in the 1970s, producing images that were hyper-alert to art history and subtly conceptual at the same time. This was, as the critic Andy Grundberg argues in his new book, How Photography Became Contemporary Art, a key moment in the history of photography when it transcended its status as a problematic subset of art and became a core, even dominant presence in contemporary art galleries.

    “It did so by incorporating all the philosophical and aesthetic ambitions of painting, sculpture, film and other media. And in the process, it also became highly self-conscious, and decidedly postmodern.”

    Medical Photography is Failing Patients with Darker Skin – The Verge

    From The Verge:

    Doctors aren’t usually in the business of publishing photography guides. But Jenna Lester, a dermatologist at the University of California San Francisco, was growing frustrated with the poor-quality images she’d receive of her dark-skinned patients…

    For instance, a bad photo of inflammation on dark skin may make the already subtle condition difficult to see. In a person of color, the use of a flash or bad lighting can drown out the problem, and the inflammation may seem to blend into the skin. On the other hand, a well-captured image of the same taken near a window using natural light could allow a clear distinction between healthy and unhealthy skin…

    The company [Google Health] trained a deep learning algorithm on a set of over 16,000 pictures of various skin conditions. But only 3.5% of these cases depicted dark and deep brown skin. Out of these photos of dark skin, it’s impossible to tell how many of them were taken using techniques that make sure they’re truly representative.

    Matt Black’s American Geography: A Tale of Two Countries _– Magnum
    _

    El Paso, Texas. 2015. Warehouse district © Matt Black / Magnum Photos, courtesy Thames & Hudson

    Matt Black has traveled over 100,000 miles and made photographs across 46 states over six years, published as American Geography by Thames & Hudson.

    Alturas, California. 2016. Cattle auction © Matt Black / Magnum Photos, courtesy Thames & Hudson

    Magnum writes:

    In a 2016 article titled Economic Growth in the United States: A Tale of Two Countries, economists Emmanuel Saez, Thomas Piketty, and Gabriel Zucman state, “Our data show that the bottom half of the income distribution in the United States has been completely shut off from economic growth since the 1970s. It’s a tale of two countries. For the 117 million U.S. adults in the bottom half of the income distribution, growth has been non-existent for a generation while at the top of the ladder it has been extraordinarily strong.”

    With his project American Geography , Matt Black chose to focus on one of these two countries. For six years, starting in 2014, traveling by bus and by car across the U.S., he explored “the geography of poverty” – photographing an America and American lives that to him were the rule, not the exception.

    Widely published in the media at the time, this extraordinary body of work deals directly with the flip side of the Dream, the fate of millions of Americans having to live with the psychological and physical pains and indignities of living poor in the richest country in the world.

    Eagle Butte, South Dakota. 2016. At a ranch house © Matt Black / Magnum Photos, courtesy Thames & Hudson

    "It becomes so easy to unsee ourselves," says Matt Black to Fred Ritchin, Dean Emeritus of The International Center of Photography (ICP) in an interview.

    The Features That More Cameras Should Have – Photography Life

    Ring-tailed lemurs licensed from Depositphotos with overlaid eye AF

    Today’s cameras have an impressive set of features, but no camera has all of them, although the technology is out there.

    From Photography Life:

    **1. Back-in-Time Buffer
    **One of the key skills of sports and wildlife photography is anticipating the moment…But even with top-tier anticipation skills, you’ll occasionally end up pressing the shutter button a hair too late and missing the moment. One feature that can save the day is what I like to call a “back-in-time buffer.” It’s found on some Olympus cameras and a few smartphones, as well as a more limited implementation on the discontinued Nikon 1 line of cameras.

    Here’s how it works. Any time you hold down the shutter button halfway, the camera captures a constant burst of photos with the electronic shutter. (It discards them rather than saving them to the memory card.) Once you fully press the shutter button, the camera saves the backlog of images from the past half-second or so. As a result, you’ll capture a moment that you otherwise would have photographed too late…

    Currently Found On: Many of the newest Olympus cameras (where it’s called “Pro Capture”), including the OM-D E-M5 Mark III and all OM-D E-M1 cameras from Mark II and beyond.

    Click on the link above for 18 other features which would be great to have.

    Real Tone is Google 's Attempt at a More Inclusive Android Camera _– Engadget
    _

    Google

    From Engadget:

    Google partnered with "a diverse set of expert image makers and photographers" to tune its new camera algorithms, including adjustments to automatic white balance, automatic exposure and stray light settings.

    The goal, in the company's words, is to "ensure that Google’s camera and imagery products work for everyone, of every skin tone." Considering Google's consumer base has always included humans of every skin tone, and this is the sixth iteration of the Pixel, it's about time these considerations were made.

    Real Tone is built into the Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro cameras and cannot be disabled and will be shared with the Android ecosystem.

    **UHS-I vs. UHS-II - What Do You REALLY NEED? -- **Dave McKeegan

    Mckeegan explains that buying a fast SD card capable of a maximum write speed of 300MB/sec will not necessarily make your camera write the data faster if it is not capable of writing at those speeds, even if it has a UHS-II slot. However, it will certainly help you download faster to your laptop, provided you use a suitable card reader. Also, the read/write speed written on the card is the maximum or peak speed which cannot be sustained for long. V30, V60, or V90, which indicates a minimum sustained write speed of 30, 60, or 90MB/sec, is a better indicator of the card's recording abilities.

    These Beautiful Images Are a Harsh Critique of Gendered Violence in India -- BuzzFeed

    The photographer Spandita Malik couldn’t have known that a breaking news story in India in 2012 about a brutal episode of violence against women would inspire an ongoing project that has shaped her work for years.

    These Otherworldly Photos Convey Climate Change 's Effects on Arctic Regions – NPR

    Ella Morton's project, The Dissolving Landscape , is a series of experimental analog photographs and short films that examine climate change in the Arctic and Subarctic landscapes of Canada and Nordic Europe.

    NPR writes:

    Mordançage is a black and white process that was developed in the 1960s by French photographer Jean-Pierre Sudre. It degrades the shadow areas of silver gelatin prints, lifting the emulsion off the paper to create unique textures and veils.

    Film soaking, also known as "film soup," is a process by which color film is soaked in ordinary household solutions, such as wine, beer, lemon juice, yogurt and dishwashing fluid. The acidity in these solutions warps the film, creating a variety of effects that speak to the sublime qualities of these landscapes, as well as their uncertain future.

    "…these techniques create colors and textures that make the landscape appear ethereal, otherworldly and mysterious…" Morton said. "On the other hand, they make the image literally dissolve, mirroring how the land is dissolving."

    Photography Museum Fotografiska to Open Spaces in Berlin, Miami, and Shanghai – ARTnews

    [

    View this post on Instagram

    ](https://www.instagram.com/p/CWyAWxxItVH/?utm_source=ig_embed&utm_campaign=loading)

    A post shared by The Museum of Photography (@fotografiska)

    Fotografiska, which first launched in Stockholm in 2010, is in expansion mode, with plans to add three new spaces to its empire of photography museums by 2023.

    The private museum said it plans to open locations in Berlin, Miami, and Shanghai over the next couple of years. The Berlin (the biggest, occupying 58,000 sq. ft.) and Shanghai museums are set to open in the third quarter of 2022, while the Miami one is expected to open in the second quarter of 2023.

    The 4 Best Green Screen Apps for Your Smartphone – MakeUseOf

    Depositphotos

    Green screen editing has become so common lately that it is a basic editing technique, and more and more apps are coming out with green screen features to popularize this trend. If you want to try editing green screens on your smartphone, check out the apps listed at the above link.

    Stunning Winning Photos of Nature inFocus Photography Contest 2021 – 121 Clicks

    Tag, You Are It! Priyanka Rahut Mitra, winner—Animal Behavior. The leopardess was deep in slumber high up on a tree branch when awakened by the alarm calls of a Malabar Giant Squirrel. On spotting the rodent, she launched an attack, chasing the squirrel around the tree trunk and eventually capturing the animal.

    The Nature inFocus Photography Contest honors shutterbugs documenting unique natural history moments and critical conservation issues and generates an impressive catalog of imaginative and artistic images every year. This year’s awards were selected from 18,000 images from 2,000 competing photographers across 40 countries.

    Spider Dreams, Anirudh Kamakeri, runner-up—Young Photographer. Most orb-weaver spiders weave a new web every day and tend to be active during the evening hours. Having observed the spider every evening on the terrace of his house, the photographer visualized this in-camera multi-exposure image, creating a beautiful bokeh from the streetlights and signboards and framing the silhouette of the spider within.

    Full Gallery of winners.

    The King’s Feast, Panos Laskarakis, runner-up—Animal Portraits. During his visit to the Okavango Delta, the photographer chanced upon a pride of lions hunting buffalos. The next night, a pack of 30 hyenas tried to steal the kill from the lions. This image was made the following day when a lone lion was feeding on one of the carcasses.

    Viva Cuba! The Heart and Soul of an Island Nation – in Pictures – The Guardian

    © Raúl Cañibano / Edition Lammerhuber

    A new book Absolut Cuba by Raúl Cañibano, published by Edition Lammerhuber of black and white images, taken over three decades, captures the Cuban photographer’s love for his native country.

    © Raúl Cañibano / Edition Lammerhuber

    Cañibano’s work comes from this strong relationship with his environment. “Every one of his photographs refers to the notion that each captured moment tells a whole story,” writes The Guardian.

    © Raúl Cañibano / Edition Lammerhuber

    Cuban novelist Leonardo Padura Fuentes writes in the book: “All reveal themselves as they are, expose themselves – unknowingly – to the gaze of the artist… To make a picture concrete, Cañibano needs only them and a little light. Nothing more, nothing less.”

    What Does This Black Dot on the iPhone Do? ** -- **ZDNet

    Depositphotos

    ZDNet writes:

    If you own an iPhone 12 Pro/Pro Max or iPhone 13 Pro/Pro Max, you might have noticed that there's a black dot built into the camera array…

    Yes, it's a camera. Well, it’s a scanner. A LiDAR scanner. LiDAR stands for Light Detection and Ranging. It fires out infrared light and then uses that light to build a 3D picture of its surroundings.

    The iPhone uses the LiDAR scanner to create depth maps for camera tricks such as portrait mode and to also help speed up autofocus. But with the right apps, it can do more. A lot more.

    Historical Photo of the Week

    Children with Turkey Pulled Wagon

    Embed from Getty ImagesFanciful portraits of children were popular in the 19th century. This one shows a young boy and girl with a cart full of pumpkins and gourds “pulled” by a couple of turkeys, who almost certainly wouldn’t have remained in harness for long.

    Quiz of the Week

    1.) Which is the world’s largest digital camera?

    2.) Which was the first hot shoe flash to have a built-in cooling system in Jan. 2016?
    a.) Nikon SB 5000
    b) Profoto A1
    c) Canon EL-1

    3.) Is it possible for a camera placed on a tripod to detect vibration and delay the firing of the shutter till the vibration has subsided?

    Answers

    1.) The world’s largest digital camera with a resolution of 3.2-gigapixels is being prepared for installation atop a Chilean mountain. It will scan the sky to help scientists gain knowledge about the Milky Way. The focal plane is made up of 189 CCDs, all cooled in a vacuum to nearly -150° Fahrenheit, to reduce noise in the images.

    2.) (a.) Nikon SB 5000, which was claimed to deliver more than 100 consecutive shots at full output.

    3.) Yes. It was first introduced in the PhaseOne XF in 2015 and is called Seismographic Vibration Delay.

    Why I Like This Photo – Mohammad Murad

    © Mohammad Murad

    I like this photo because I love Intentional Camera Movement (ICM) photography.

    I have this inside desire to photograph in slow shutter as something about it just fascinates me, and I’m not talking about panning technique here. I’m talking about reinventing the scene, adding a touch of mystery to it, something to represent me, something to reflect my inner self.

    It’s like when a violinist plays his melody in his own way to express something inside him, maybe a feeling -- a happy or a sad feeling.

    Maybe you will not understand or like his melody, or perhaps you will. But that won’t affect the violinist at all. He just wants to be heard and will leave the interpretation to the audience.

    Photography using a slow shutter technique in camera simulates drawing or sketching using crayons or pencil. Each painting or image has a special mood or feeling.

    Taking a still photo with a great composition is wonderful, of course! But a little bit of motion in the image will make the viewer feel that the animal or the bird is doing something. It will infuse some sense of life in it.

    Intentional Camera Movement (ICM) photography is an abstract style of shooting that has no rules – it all comes down to moving your camera over a long exposure. This lack of context is one of the main reasons why abstract photography is both interesting and challenging.

    It’s hard to describe an abstract. It’s a form of art that needs no one to describe it or explain it. Every part of the photograph is ambiguous. Never explain a photo to anyone. Leave those who want to understand it to investigate and do not prevent those who want to find a mistake from finding it.

    This photograph was taken in Tanzania in 2018 when a baby elephant and its mother, along with a big herd of elephants, were walking by my vehicle.

    The image was shot on the Canon EOS-1D X Mark II with Canon EF100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM @ 400mm, f/18, 0.3 sec, ISO 50.

    It was my first trip to Tanzania, and I decided to shoot the whole trip (10 days) with slow shutter! I even bought a variable neutral density filter for my Canon EF100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens to drop the shutter speed as I desired

    Mohammad Murad (b.1976) is a Kuwaiti photographer and holds a degree in communication engineering. Murad specializes in wildlife with a special interest in bird photography. He had never foreseen himself becoming the professional and award-winning photographer that he is today. He attributes his passion for photography to two factors: his father, who at an early age taught him to “capture the moment” in his photographs, and Kuwait’s gorgeous landscape combining the desert and the sea.

    Read also: An Intro to Intentional Camera Movement (ICM) Photography

    Quote of the Week – Matt Black

    Allensworth, California. 2014. Fence post © Matt Black / Magnum Photos, courtesy Thames & Hudson

    The above photo is from American Geography, published by Thames & Hudson.

    [I want to help photographers] to find that inner voice or personal perspective, rather than [take] photos that people expect [them] to take.* -- Matt Black

    ***** Susan Meiselas and Matt Black on Being the Mentors They Wanted to Have -- Magnum

    Matt Black, a member of Magnum Photos, lives in California’s Central Valley, a rural, agricultural area in the heart of the state. His work has focused on themes of geography, inequality, and the environment. Since 2015, he has traveled over 100,000 miles across 46 states for his project American Geography (see above). Other works include The Dry Land , about the impact of drought on California’s agricultural communities, and The Monster in the Mountains , about the disappearance of 43 students in the southern Mexican state of Guerrero.

    To see an archive of past issues of Great Reads in Photography, click here.

    We welcome comments as well as suggestions. As we cannot possibly cover each and every source, if you see something interesting in your reading or local newspaper anywhere in the world, kindly forward the link to us here. ALL messages will be personally acknowledged.

    About the author : Phil Mistry is a photographer and teacher based in Atlanta, GA. He started one of the first digital camera classes in New York City at The International Center of Photography in the 90s. He was the director and teacher for Sony/Popular Photography magazine’s Digital Days Workshops. You can reach him here.

    Image credits: All photographs as credited and used with permission from the photographers or agencies. Portions of header photo via Depositphotos. Middle horizontal (top) and middle horizontal (bottom) from Absolut Cuba by Raúl Cañibano, published by Edition Lammerhuber.

    #inspiration #news #elsewhere #greatreadsinphotography #grip #historicalphotooftheweek #interestingreadings #links #philmistry #photographer #photographers #quizoftheweek #quoteoftheweek #readings #recap #roundup #whyilikethisphoto

    Great Reads in Photography: November 21, 2021

    Every Sunday, we bring together a collection of easy-reading articles from analytical to how-to to photo features in no particular order that did not make our regular daily coverage. Enjoy!

    **HBO Film Tells the Story of How Gordon Parks Changed Photography **– The Guardian

    Gordon Parks, a groundbreaking photographer who died in 2006, is the subject of A Choice of Weapons: Inspired by Gordon Parks, a new HBO film by documentary filmmaker John Maggio.

    From The Guardian :

    In 1956, as the first Black staff photographer of Life magazine [worked for 20 years], he [Parks] traveled in and around Mobile, Alabama, on assignment to capture the realities of Jim Crow. He chose to shoot in color, aiming his lens at both the more vibrant and quotidian moments of Black American daily life: the church picnic, the trip to the ice cream shop, the hanging of laundry out to dry…

    Aside from the mastery of Parks's composition, each image had also captured prodding, daily indignities in minute but poignant detail – a young Black woman and her niece standing in their finest clothes, for example, standing below the blaring red neon of a "colored entrance" sign.

    Embed from Getty Images

    Maggio's documentary moves through Parks's rich photo essays on a Harlem gang leader, the segregated South, Muhammad Ali, and a boy in a Rio de Janeiro favela, as well as bold early work on Ella Watson, a janitor at the Farm Security Administration. A line is drawn from Parks's legacy to the cultural narratives being charted by the current photographers Devin Allen and LaToya Ruby Frazier. – The New York Times

    Read also:How Self-Taught Photographer Gordon Parks Became a Master Storytellers

    Annie Leibovitz's Enchanting New Book Showcases an Artist Who Changed Fashion Photography Forever -- Vogue

    Sean Combs and Kate Moss, Hyatt Hotel, Paris, 1999 © Annie Leibovitz. From Annie Leibovitz Wonderland. Annie Leibovitz, 2012 © Annie Leibovitz

    In 1999, Vogue sent Annie to Paris to cover the couture collections for the first time—and surprised her by casting Sean Combs [then known as Puff Daddy] alongside Kate Moss (above). "The shoot was a cross-cultural straddling of two worlds: rap culture and high fashion," the photographer writes in Wonderland [containing 341 images]. "And, of course, they weren't all that different."

    Keira Knightley and Jeff Koons, Goshen, New York, 2005, (Wizard of Oz) © Annie Leibovitz. From Annie Leibovitz Wonderland.

    From The New York Times

    Annie Leibovitz would like to make one thing clear upfront: She is not a fashion photographer. Given that her new book, Wonderland, is an anthology of fashion images shot mainly for Vogue, that's curious.

    "Fashion wasn't anything I wanted to be involved with," she says. Yet the visually arresting images in Wonderland, her new book and collection, may be her strongest work.

    Wonderland by Annie Leibovitz is published by Phaidon.

    **Robert Frank's Seminal Photo Series The Americans to be Reissued After $1M Grant **– The Art Newspaper

    The Americans by Robert Frank, 1969 2nd printing.

    The Americans by photographer Robert Frank will be republished in 2024 by Aperture on the Centennial of Frank's birth.

    Frank (1924 – 2019), who was born in Switzerland, took a road trip across America over many years after receiving a Guggenheim Grant in 1954. This body of work was published as The Americans in 1958.

    "Robert Frank helped us see ourselves more clearly and critically," Sarah Meister, the former photography curator at MoMA New York, who took over as Aperture 's executive director, tells The Art Newspaper. "This new edition will respect and honor that."

    "Photographers from successive generations, from Garry Winogrand and Lee Friedlander to Bruce Davidson and onto a new generation of photographers today, among them Khalik Allah, Hannah Price and Colby Deal, all pay homage to Frank's conceptual creation of street photography."

    Frank's journey was not without incident. He later recalled the anti-Semitism to which he was subject in a small Arkansas town. "I remember the guy [policeman] took me into the police station, and he sat there and put his feet on the table. It came out that I was Jewish because I had a letter from the Guggenheim Foundation. They really were primitive." He was told by the sheriff, "Well, we have to get somebody who speaks Yiddish."… "They wanted to make a thing out of it. It was the only time it happened on the trip. They put me in jail. It was scary. Nobody knew where I was." Elsewhere in the South, he was told by a sheriff that he had "an hour to leave town." Those incidents may have contributed to the dark view of America found in the work -- Wikipedia

    Wedding Photography to Do List (According to 200 Photographers) – SLR Lounge

    Photo illustration courtesy SLR Lounge

    SLR Lounge polled over 200 photographers to find the following eight tasks to be the most important for prepping for the ceremony.

  • Sync your cameras/beginning of the day (26%).
  • Communicate team positions (diagram above) (16%).
  • Check out the link above for more tips and details.

    **Photographer Bob Gruen Gets Candid **– the Village Voice

    Private Dancer: Tina Turner lights up the Honka Monka. © Bob Gruen

    The Queens club [Honka Monka] was not necessarily a household name, but it did host Ike and Tina Turner on July 8, 1970, and photographer Bob Gruen, now 76, one of the best-known rock photographers, had a stellar view.

    John Lennon on rooftop in New York City. August 29, 1974. © Bob Gruen Polaroid of Bob Gruen taking a photo of John Lennon wearing NYC t-shirt on rooftop, NYC. August 29, 1974. © Bob Gruen

    From the Village Voice :

    In Right Place, Right Time , he [Gruen] describes the gig: "I couldn't take my eyes off her—she was like a whirling tornado," he remembers of Tina. "I raised my camera, but I didn't know where to focus. I didn't know what the exposure would be. I didn't know when the timing would be right. All I could see were flashes of her in the strobe. Thinking fast, I decided to see what would happen if I opened the camera up to a one-second exposure and let the strobe flashes expose the film—and I got one of the best pictures (above, first pic) I've ever taken."

    In his book, Gruen describes the resultant picture as "five Tinas in the frame, trailing streamers of light." The dynamic image opened doors for the young photographer.

    **Also,Interview: Photographer Bob Gruen **– Celebrity Access

    **ZEISS Celebrates 175th Anniversary: 175 Years of Innovation, Passion and the Courage to Develop **– Imaging Insider

    The illuminated tower at ZEISS' HQ in Oberkochen, Germany, during the anniversary week

    175 years ago, on 17 November 1846, young mechanic Carl Zeiss opened his workshop for precision mechanics and optics in Jena, thus laying the foundation for what would become ZEISS.

    Today with over 35,000 employees, ZEISS operates in almost 50 countries worldwide, with around 60 sales and service companies, 30 production sites and 27 development sites.

    Read also: Video: Fascinating'Lens Design 101' Interview with a ZEISS Master

    **The Unforgotten: the Vogue Photo Festival – in Pictures **– The Guardian

    Untitled from the series Warawar Wawa, "Son of the Stars" in the language of the Aymara people of the Bolivian Andes. This is a re-imagining of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's book Le Petit Prince © River Claure

    For its 6th edition, titled Reframing History , the **PhotoVogue **festival features projects incorporating an alternative and different way of telling a tale. The annual photography festival invites artists to reclaim overlooked or marginalized histories, from the Bolivian Andes to Africa and beyond

    The Market Photo Workshop, 2007-8. Lalhande, 21, with his cigar, in front of a photo studio in Brazzaville © Daniele Tamagni

    PhotoVogue celebrates its 10th anniversary with a video that features over 500 photographs. As of today, it counts over 257,000 photographers and over 700,000 photographs from 210 countries. Curated by Vogue Italia's photo editors, PhotoVogue offers an internationally diverse database of the most interesting voices in contemporary photography.

    Photo Vogue Festival 2021 is free to view online with an exhibition at BASE Milano

    _Remembering British Photojournalist Tom Stoddart, Dead at 68 _– Amateur Photographer

    Embed from Getty ImagesOne of the finest documentary photographers and photojournalists the UK has ever produced, Tom Stoddart died at 68 after a brave struggle with cancer.

    From Amateur Photographer:

    Tom began his photographic career in local newspapers in his beloved North East before moving to London and building a solid reputation as a photojournalist, most notably for his coverage of Desert Storm. He really made his name, however, with his images from the frontline of the civil war in the former Yugoslavia (he was seriously injured by Serbian artillery while covering the siege of Sarajevo in 1992).

    His image of Meliha Varešanović (Tom holds the photo above), striding defiantly down "sniper alley" in the city, is now the stuff of legend.

    On the Anniversary of His Death, Revisiting Photographer Peter Lindbergh 's Final Project, Untold Stories – Vogue

    Uma Thurman, New York, 2016 © Peter Lindbergh, courtesy Taschen

    Photographer Peter Lindberg (1944-2019) self-curated his first exhibition just two years before his death selecting 140 images from the early 1980s to 2010. It featured unseen images of legendary supermodels such as Claudia Schiffer, Karen Elson and Milla Jovovich.

    Sasha Pivovarova, Steffy Argelich, Kirsten Owen & Guinevere van Seenus, Brooklyn, 2015 © Peter Lindbergh, courtesy Taschen

    Lindberg documented the rise of the 1990s supermodels such as Linda Evangelista, Naomi Campbell and Cindy Crawford.

    "He photographed Anna Wintour's first Vogue cover in November 1988—a now-infamous image of Israeli model Michaela Bercu, wearing a bejeweled Christian Lacroix top," writes Vogue. "In what would be one of his final projects, Lindbergh was chosen by guest editor Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, to shoot the cover of British Vogue in September 2019."

    Peter Lindbergh. Untold Stories is published by Taschen

    Read also: Peter Lindbergh, Fashion Photography Icon, Has Died at Age 74

    **Irving Penn's 'Girl Behind Bottle' Sells for $210,000 at Paris Photo **-- Ocula

    [

    View this post on Instagram

    ](https://www.instagram.com/p/86XSzYNj_K/?utm_source=ig_embed&utm_campaign=loading)

    A post shared by The Irving Penn Foundation (@the.irving.penn.foundation)

    Read also: Irving Penn's Timeless Photography and 'Photographism'

    STOP Shooting at Apertures Smaller than f/11

    Why? Watch the Diffraction Tutorial from Matt Granger:

    **Lady Gaga Calls Out Photographer for Making Al Pacino Remove Sunglasses on House of Gucci Red Carpet **– The Independent

    Embed from Getty ImagesFrom The Independent

    Lady Gaga called out a photographer for ordering Al Pacino to remove his sunglasses.

    The pair were having photos taken alongside Jared Leto at the premiere of their new film House of Gucci.

    In a video shared by Entertainment Tonight , one particularly confident photographer could be heard shouting: "Take off your glasses, Al!"

    Pacino, smiling, removed his sunglasses. However, Gaga replied: "Don't make him take his glasses off – he's Al Pacino!"

    Leto then urged him to put them back on, which he did.

    Embed from Getty Images

    **Why Apple Changed its Mind on Right to Repair **-- Engadget

    Depositphotos

    From Engadget:

    Apple does not have a good track record in terms of letting customers repair their hardware. The last decade-plus has seen Apple's computers become essentially impossible for users to service or upgrade, and the iPhone has always been a locked box…

    So Apple's announcement earlier this week that it would start selling parts and tools directly to consumers and offer repair guides was a huge surprise and a move immediately hailed as a victory by right-to-repair activists…

    Nathan Proctor, a senior Right to Repair campaign director at Public Interest Research Groups (PIRG), told Engadget in an email exchange that he thinks "combined pressure from consumers, regulators and shareholders has shifted Apple's thinking."

    Read also:Apple's New Program Will Let You Repair iPhones and Macs Yourself

    Photo of the Week

    Embed from Getty Images School Kids in Glass Cubicles in the Philippines

    After almost two years of the COVID-19 shutdown, the Philippines resumed limited face-to-face classes in 100 schools across the country this week on November 15. The Philippines is the last country in the world to reopen schools.

    Quiz of the Week

    1.) A tilted horizon is called the
    a.) French angle
    b.) Kodak angle as the original Brownie was difficult to level
    c.) Dutch angle

    2.) Nikon made an F-mount 1000mm f/6.3 lens circa 1959. This lens was relatively short in length for its large focal length and the design was called
    a.) Catadioptric lens (CAT)
    b.) Reflex lens
    c.) Mirror lens

    3.) In the Sunny 16 rule which was popular before light meters were built into film cameras, the aperture was set to f/16 on a sunny day. How was the shutter speed selected?

    Answers

    1.) (c.) Dutch angle

    2.) All three are correct and mean the same thing for the Nikon 1000mm f/6.3

    3.) It was the reciprocal of the ISO film speed, i.e., 100 ISO would be 1/100 sec. (or 1/125 sec) and 400 ISO would be 1/400 sec. (or 1/500 sec)

    Why I Like This Photo –Josh Edelson

    Lt. Ryan Chamberlain (below) and CDR Frank Weisser (above) fly U.S. Navy Blue Angels numbers 5 and 6 over San Francisco, California as part of a practice run for Fleet Week on October 06, 2016. © Josh Edelson

    While on assignment for Agence France-Presse (AFP), I had coordinated to photograph the Blue Angels from the air during their annual Fleet Week event over San Francisco, California. But it didn't just happen by luck.

    To get this photo, I arranged to fly in a chase plane with the door taken off. I was strapped in so I wouldn't fall to certain death in the San Francisco Bay below. I shot with my Nikon D5 and used my wide angle 24-70mm F/2.8 lens because these Navy F/A-18E Super Hornet jets were actually only about 30 feet away from me.

    Capturing these monsters of war thousands of feet up in the sky, with the San Francisco skyline in the background all while the pilot is looking directly at me, is an incredibly rare and well-orchestrated confluence of circumstances. That's what I love about this photo – that you can't just go out and make this image yourself without coordinating with dozens of people and organizations.

    It's actually a trickier shot to get than it may seem. The plane I was in wasn't fast enough to keep up with the Blue Angels, so we had to start at a high altitude and enter into a gigantic downward spiral to get the chase plane fast enough to match the minimum speed of the Blue Angels while maintaining a significant bank. While in this maneuver, we only had about two full rotations around the city before reaching our floor altitude, giving us only a few chances to get everything lined up.

    I also needed to coordinate with the fighter pilots as well as my own to try to create separation between the planes. If the wings or any other parts of the jets overlapped, it would ruin the shot - so I'd be telling the pilots to speed up, slow down, go higher, or go lower than their wingman or us. Even the slightest adjustment on the pilot's part would alter the separation, which could make or break the photo. All that, and I still needed to line it up with the ideal cityscape background.

    I also had to keep my camera inside the plane. Reaching even slightly outside would subject my camera to winds of 130mph+, making it impossible to hold onto. It's also so loud and erratic in the chase plane, you can't hear or feel your shutter firing, so you just fire away and hope for the best. I shot at about 32mm. Any wider, and I'd be seeing my chase plane's wings which kills the composition.

    Shooting the Blue Angels from the sky is probably one of the most exciting shoots I've done. Not just because it's exciting to look at, but because it was just as fun of an experience as you might imagine! And if you've ever wondered whether or not these planes are actually super close together or if it's just an illusion, let this photo provide proof that they are indeed flying $56 million jets only a few feet apart at hundreds of miles per hour!

    Josh Edelson is an internationally published freelance photojournalist and commercial photographer based in the San Francisco Bay Area. Photojournalism takes up 25% of his time, and the rest goes to corporate events and headshots. His client list includes Apple, Google, Facebook, LinkedIn, The Governments of Dubai and Ireland. The most interesting thing he has done-proposed to his wife last year while skydiving in Spain! Recent News Work: via Getty

    Quote of the Week -- Peter Lindberg

    Naomi Campbell, Ibiza, 2000 © Peter Lindbergh.

    The above photo is from Peter Lindbergh. Untold Stories published by Taschen.

    People think that it is important to learn by assisting the great photographers. I say that is a big mistake. Be happy; just learn from any little guy. Learn how to use the camera - you don't need anything else. You can't be taught the real skill anyway. -- Peter Lindbergh

    Peter Lindbergh (1944–2019) was a German fashion photographer who preferred black & white photography. He captured fashion models Linda Evangelista, Naomi Campbell, Tatjana Patitz, Cindy Crawford, and Christy Turlington together for the January 1990 British Vogue cover, beginning an era of supermodels. He photographed the Pirelli Calendar three times 1996, 2002, and 2017. In 2002 he used actresses for the calendar instead of models for the first time. Germaine Greer described it as "Pirelli's most challenging calendar yet."

    To see an archive of past issues of Great Reads in Photography, click here.

    We welcome comments as well as suggestions. As we cannot possibly cover each and every source, if you see something interesting in your reading or local newspaper anywhere in the world, kindly forward the link to us here. ALL messages will be personally acknowledged.

    About the author : Phil Mistry is a photographer and teacher based in Atlanta, GA. He started one of the first digital camera classes in New York City at The International Center of Photography in the 90s. He was the director and teacher for Sony/Popular Photography magazine’s Digital Days Workshops. You can reach him here.

    Image credits: All photographs as credited and used with permission from the photographers or agencies. Portions of header photo via Depositphotos. Middle horizontal (top) "Son of the Stars" © River Claure, courtesy PhotoVogue, Middle horizontal (bottom) Lalhande, 21, with his cigar, in front of a photo studio in Brazzaville © Daniele Tamagni, courtesy PhotoVogue, Blue Angels on extreme left © Josh Edelson.

    #inspiration #news #elsewhere #greatreadsinphotography #grip #interestingreadings #links #philmistry #photographer #photographers #photooftheweek #quizoftheweek #quoteoftheweek #readings #recap #roundup #whyilikethisphoto

    Great Reads in Photography: November 21, 2021

    Every Sunday, we bring together a collection of easy-reading articles from analytical to how-to to photo features in no particular order that did not make

    PetaPixel

    Great Reads in Photography: November 14, 2021

    Every Sunday, we bring together a collection of easy-reading articles from analytical to how-to to photo features in no particular order that did not make our regular daily coverage. Enjoy!

    ' People Arrived for Work and Got Vaporised': How Kikuji Kawada Captured the Trauma of Hiroshima – The Guardian

    The ruins of the Hiroshima Prefectural Industrial Promotion Hall reflected in the Ohta river. © Kikuji Kawada. Image from Chizu (Maquette Edition) (MACK, 2021). Courtesy the artist, The New York Public Library, and MACK.

    Photographer Kikuji Kawada was 25 when he visited Hiroshima in 1958 for the first time. He was drawn to the ruined shell of a once decorative steel-framed building that was still standing despite being severely damaged when America dropped the first atomic bomb on the city at 8.15 am on 6 August 1945, obliterating everything else within a mile radius.

    © Kikuji Kawada. Image from Chizu (Maquette Edition) (MACK, 2021). Courtesy the artist, The New York Public Library, and MACK.

    "Haunted by what he had seen, Kawada later returned to Hiroshima with a large format 4×5 plate camera and, using only the natural light coming through the shattered dome overhead, photographed the eerie shapes on what is now known as the Genbaku (A-Bomb) Dome, a memorial to the victims of the bombing," writes The Guardian. "The 'stain' photographs , as they have come to be known, are the emotional and conceptual dark heart of Kawada's book, Chizu (The Map), which was first published in an edition of 500 in 1965.

    "It is," says the British photographer Martin Parr, "the holy grail of Japanese photobooks.

    "When the place was destroyed," he told Aperture magazine in 2015, "there were about 30 people (who) had arrived for work and ended up vaporized."

    Everyday objects … Coca-Cola bottles embedded in the ground. © Kikuji Kawada. Image from Chizu (Maquette Edition) (MACK, 2021). Courtesy the artist, The New York Public Library, and MACK.

    Kawada's Chizu took five years to create and has resold for up to £25,000 (~$33,500) a copy. Now a new edition revisits his personal archeology of a nation's pain.

    Chizu (Maquette Edition) is published by Mack.

    Also, Kikuji Kawada on the Traumas of History and the Skies above Japan -- Aperture

    The Stories Behind 5 of David Hume Kennerly 's Iconic Images – Digital Photo Pro

    Embed from Getty ImagesPulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist and Canon Explorer of Light David Hume Kennerly shares the stories behind five of his powerful photos.

    Kennerly writes in DPP :

    The Hug (above) was taken at the dedication of the National Museum of African American History and Culture in 2016 when First Lady Michelle Obama hugged former President George W. Bush.

    I immediately knew that the embrace was important. If I had taken it a fraction of a second before, after, or standing a foot in either direction, I would have missed the moment. Another key element was Bush having his eyes closed for that magic instant, and it helped make the photo something special. The picture went viral as soon as I posted it online…

    Here you see an African American woman hugging a white man. A Democrat hugging a Republican…

    This image is the non-political and bi-partisan manifestation of people of all colors, sizes, shapes, and political parties getting together to celebrate the opening of the NMAAHC…I made this frame with the Canon EOS 5DS R using the Canon EF 100-400mm lens at 400mm.

    Also, on Kennerly 's blog Uncropped: The Story Behind "The Hug" Photo

    **Announcing the Winners of the 2021 PhotoBook Awards **- - Aperture

    Paris Photo and Aperture Foundation have announced the 2021 Paris Photo–Aperture Foundation PhotoBook Awards winners. From the thirty-five shortlisted, a final jury in Paris selected this year's winners.

    8 Wedding Photography Trends That Will Come into Focus in 2022 -- Vogue

    © The Blumes

    Wedding clients are no longer interested in the overly formal photos of the past and campy studio shots that were preferred in the '80s. Today's couples are more interested in bridal imagery that's thoughtfully composed and authentic.

    Click on the link above to discover what wedding photographers will be capturing as we head into 2022, from portrait styles and lighting to popular props and color schemes.

    Forced From Home: the Humans and Animals Under Threat – in Pictures – The Guardian

    James and Fatu, Kenya, 2020 © Nick Brandt 2021

    Nick Brandt visited five animal sanctuaries in Africa to portray the people displaced by droughts and the creatures whose very existence is under threat.

    The Making of The Day May Break © Nick Brandt 2021

    Brandt writes in the introduction:

    The animals there are almost all long-term rescues because of everything from poaching of their parents, to habitat destruction, to poisoning.

    These animals can never be released back into the wild, as they would not survive. With their lives now spent within the sanctuaries, they have become habituated to humans. As a result, it was safe for human strangers to be close to the animals, photographed, crucially, in the same frame at the same time.

    The fog [which was created by water-based non-toxic fog machines on location] is the unifying visual, symbolically causing a once-recognizable world to fade from view…

    I'm stating the obvious, but it needs to keep being repeated: that in destroying nature, we will also ultimately destroy ourselves. A healthy natural world is essential for the well-being of all humanity.

    Richard and Sky, Zimbabwe, 2020 © Nick Brandt 2021

    The Day May Break by Nick Brandt is published by Hatje Cantz

    The Surprising True Story of Kodak Aerochrome and Photographer Richard Mosse 's Images and Film of the Congolese War

    Read also:
    ****The Enclave: A Powerful Documentary on The Congo Shot Entirely on Infrared Film
    ****Unique Photos of Eastern Congo Made Using Infrared Film

    Picasso, Afghanistan and Me: the Wild Adventures of Fred Baldwin – in Pictures – The Guardian

    A car being decorated for a Knights of the KKK meeting. Baldwin recalls: “Driving through rural Georgia in 1966, I found, to my amazement, cars being decorated to go to a Knights of the Ku Klux Klan meeting. I stopped, overcame my fear, and got permission to follow them to the meeting and a cross rising on the steps of the County Courthouse in Reidsville, Georgia, where I completed the photography that night.” © Fred Baldwin, photo courtesy Schilt Publishing.

    "At 90, photographer Fred Baldwin still has 'so much work left to do'," writes James Estrin in The New York Times.

    Fred Baldwin (b 1928), the celebrated American photographer and co-founder of FotoFest (Houston), took a turn in the direction of the extraordinary when during his last year of college in 1955, he decided to photograph Pablo Picasso. After a three-day siege outside Picasso's house in Cannes, France, the artist finally opened the door to Baldwin, who was allowed to take pictures freely in his studio.

    Baldwin (center) with Pablo Picasso, at the painter's home in Cannes, July 1955. "I was a college student. He was my imaginary father. I delivered an illustrated letter to his doorstep in Cannes explaining why I had to see him…I spent the day with him. It changed my life. After this experience, I felt that I could do anything I set out to do."

    After graduating from college, he would spend the next 20 years making remarkable picture stories about people and places, taking him to extreme adventure, and at times, great personal risk. His camera would become his passport to the world and provide the material and inspiration for Dear Mr. Picasso: An Illustrated Love Affair with Freedom, from Schilt Publishing, Netherlands.

    The Klan work was a complete accident. He was setting out to try to do his first documentary project by photographing a tobacco auction in rural Georgia. However, he never got there because, on the way, he found a line of cars parked on the side of the highway being decorated with KKK slogans.

    How to Use Diagonal Lines in Photography -- ShotKit

    Depositphotos

    You've probably heard that a diagonal line can give a sense of action or lead the viewer to different points in the image – while this is true, it's not always easy to implement this rule.

    1.) Avoid connecting opposite corners
    2.) Create depth with diagonal lines
    3.) Use the Dutch angle

    Check out the above link for eight more tips and full details.

    **These Photos Show the Timeless Appeal of Travel And Tourism **-- BuzzFeed

    Tourists at cliff dwellings in Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado, Aug.1939, from 35 mm nitrate negative, photo by Russell Lee (1903-1986), Library of Congress.

    Under lockdown, travel photography fueled our jealousy, longing, and admiration. For travelers back in the 1800s, photographs were important in another way: "You might have gone to that place, but you couldn't take a picture of it, so you buy one to show people back home," said Jamie Allen, an associate curator at the George Eastman Museum in Rochester, New York, to BuzzFeed.

    **The Photo-Lab to Close After 107 Years in Downtown Schenectady, NY **– Daily Gazette

    **Using a Teleconverter in Lunar Photography **-- Space

    Embed from Getty Images"All budding astrophotographers should consider using teleconverters in their camera set-up," recommends photographer Jason Parnell-Brookes in the article above.

    How Architecture Depends on Photography

    Stewart Hicks, an Associate Professor in the School of Architecture at the University of Illinois at Chicago, discusses the work of famous architectural photographers.

    ___19 Awesome Books on the Long History of Photography _– My Modern Met

    Photo from A History of Photography. From 1839 to the Present published by Taschen

    Check out this curated list of 20 titles that walk you through a photographic tour from daguerreotype to digital.

    Joke of the Week

    The old lady was walking to her local grocery store when she spots a youngster walking her dog.

    "That's a cute puppy," she compliments the 12-year-old.

    "That's nothing," says the young lady, "let me show you his photo on my iPhone."

    Photo of the Week

    Embed from Getty ImagesRusty wipes out during the annual Surf City Surf Dog event at Huntington Beach, California.

    Quiz of the Week

    1.) Which are the first and only two professional mirrorless cameras to have an integrated grip for vertical shooting.

    2.) Which camera has a built-in flash trigger for firing Profoto flashes?

    3.) For photos created in the United States, the copyright generally expires
    a.) With the death of the person
    b.) 70 years after the death
    c.) It never expires, provided it is created after 1925 and registered with the US Copyright Office only during the lifetime of the photographer
    d) 25 years after death for unregistered works

    Answers

    1.) Nikon Z9 and Canon EOS R3

    2.) PhaseOne. Nikon has announced a partnership with lighting brands Nissin and Profoto, but no technical details are currently available.

    3.) (b.) 70 years after the death.

    Why I Like This Photo -- Steve Jessmore

    Fish Flip. Great Blue Heron successful at Arcadia Marsh in northern Michigan, 8/2021 © Steve Jessmore Photography

    I came across this Great Blue Heron while walking on a boardwalk at Arcadia Marsh in northern Michigan. It was a midsummer afternoon in August of 2021. We had had a long day of travel, getting up before sunrise, and it was now 9 hours later. I watched the bird through my Sony a1 and Sony FE 600mm f4 GM OSS plus 1.4 converter, giving me a focal length of 840 mm. Patience paid off, and it wasn't 20-minutes later that it grabbed and flipped back and swallowed this fish.

    My favorite wildlife photos tell stories and show behavior. I love this photo because of the moment and the story. The tight crop emphasizes a graphic composition with the s-curve neck and the beak. The circle of life contest between the hungry predator and prey freezes the moment of the fish perfectly centered as it is flipped in midair between the beak and swallowed whole. The gaze of both bird and fish makes the photo for me. One can see the almost "sad" look on the fish's face as if it realizes the inevitable.

    There's an old saying about "a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush." My thought is to work with what you see and not go looking for something else you may find. Wait for something special to happen. I know a lot of photographers that I've shot with who just get a couple of shots quickly of whatever we come across and don't stop to try to tell a story. I love moments that give an insight into their behavior and life's pursuits.

    Steve Jessmore is a five-time Michigan Press Photographer Association, Photographer of the Year. Jessmore left newspapers in 2013 for a new challenge-to be the photographer/photo editor for Central Michigan University. He is currently a freelance photographer in Grand Rapids, Michigan, using his 30-years of experience and focusing on storytelling, collaboration, branding and community journalism.

    **Quote of the Week -- **Nick Brandt

    Harriet and People in Fog, Zimbabwe, 2020 © Nick Brandt 2021

    I want my images to achieve two things in this regard - to be an elegy to a world that is tragically vanishing, to make people see what beauty is disappearing. Also, to try and show that animals are sentient creatures equally as worthy of life as humans.* -- Nick Brandt ****

    *Nick Brandt’s Love Of Africa

    Nick Brandt (b. 1964) is an English photographer. Brandt's work generally focuses on the rapidly disappearing natural world because of environmental destruction, climate change and man's actions. While directing Earth Song, a music video for Michael Jackson in Tanzania in 1995, Brandt fell in love with the animals and land of East Africa.

    To see an archive of past issues of Great Reads in Photography, click here.

    We welcome comments as well as suggestions. As we cannot possibly cover each and every source, if you see something interesting in your reading or local newspaper anywhere in the world, kindly forward the link to us here. ALL messages will be personally acknowledged.

    About the author : Phil Mistry is a photographer and teacher based in Atlanta, GA. He started one of the first digital camera classes in New York City at The International Center of Photography in the 90s. He was the director and teacher for Sony/Popular Photography magazine’s Digital Days Workshops. You can reach him via email here.

    Image credits: All photographs as credited and used with permission from the photographers or agencies. Portions of header photo via Depositphotos, car in Reidsville, GA, Fred Baldwin, photo courtesy Schilt Publishing, A History of Photography From 1839 to the Present published by Taschen and tourists at cliff dwellings in Mesa Verde National Park from Library of Congress.

    #inspiration #news #elsewhere #greatreadfromthepast #greatreadsinphotography #grip #interestingreadings #jokeoftheweek #links #philmistry #photographer #photographers #photooftheweek #quizoftheweek #quoteoftheweek #readings #recap #roundup #whyilikethisphoto

    Great Reads in Photography: November 14, 2021

    Every Sunday, we bring together a collection of easy-reading articles from analytical to how-to to photo features in no particular order that did not make

    PetaPixel

    Great Reads in Photography: November 7, 2021

    Every Sunday, we bring together a collection of easy-reading articles from analytical to how-to to photo features in no particular order that did not make our regular daily coverage. Enjoy!

    Canon Explorer of Light Rick Sammon talks about the Canon EOS R3 – Phil Mistry

    I suggest selecting your "keepers" from a wildlife shoot based on two main factors: 1) gesture – the position of the wings, body and head, and 2) the sharpness and illumination of the eyes. If the eyes are not well lit and in focus, you (and I) have missed the shot (in most cases). © Rick Sammon

    Rick Sammon has been photographing for 40 years.

    "I'm an A-to-Z type of photographer," Sammon says. "I do it all – and I enjoy the freedom of not specializing."

    Sammon, a Canon Explorer of Light, has photographed in 100 countries and been published in 42 books. He started as an underwater photographer leading scuba diving expeditions to the seven seas. He then easily transitioned into travel, landscape, wildlife, cultural and nature photography.

    The true test of how well Animal Tracking works is when you try to photograph a fast-moving subject coming directly at you. The R3 passes the test with flying colors . . . and flying feathers in this case! © Rick Sammon

    The 5-Minute Sunday Interview

    Phil Mistry: How long have you been shooting with the Canon R3?

    Rick Sammon: I have been photographing (more like testing at home for my travel workshops and tours) with the Canon EOS R3 for about three weeks, using the Canon RF 100-500mm f/4.5-7.1 L IS USM lens for my wildlife photography.

    PM: What is one thing that you like the most about the R3?

    RS: Asking about the "one" thing I like about the camera is kinda like asking a parent, "Who is your favorite child?" So, to answer that question, I'd say I like the combination of super-fast auto focus (with subject detection, especially animals) and the super-high frame rate – which helps me capture very subtle differences in gestures in my wildlife photographs.

    Separation (especially the heads and eyes) is the key when photographing multiple birds in flight. Photographing with a camera with a frame rate of up to 30 frames per second can help photographers accomplish that goal. © Rick Sammon

    PM: Does the 24 MP sensor allow you to crop as you could do with your other cameras?

    RS: Yes! Because I always try to get it right in camera, photographing at the lowest possible ISO for the cleanest possible shot.

    PM: When Canon makes the R1 (or whatever they call the top-level camera), what three features would you like to have which are not there in the R3?

    RS: At this point, for my type of wildlife photography, I think the R3 is ideal.

    When it comes to birds in flight (BIF) photography, it's usually wings up, or wings down that makes a good shot. This composite of the same seagull, photographed with the R3 and RF100-500 lens, illustrates that photo philosophy. © Rick Sammon

    PM: Is eye control useful for all photographers?

    RS: I think the Eye-Control is useful for photographers who photograph busy scenes, such as a baseball batter running between second and third base, with the pitcher in the foreground and outfielder in the background. It is also useful when photographing different types of birds flying over a field or pond – and you want one shot of a particular bird.

    PM: Any other thoughts?

    RS: I think the feel of a camera is important, just as the feel of a guitar [Sammon is a guitar teacher] is important. Easy-to-access controls are also important, especially when exposure and focus decisions need to be made in a split second. The R3 offers both . . . not to mention offering an amazing viewfinder.

    Read also: ** Looking vs. Seeing as a Photographer**

    The One Shot That Changed Everything – in Pictures – The Guardian

    [

    View this post on Instagram

    ](http://apicdn.viglink.com/api/click?format=go&key=dae5b94bb21a32cc7c141a041d18f05b&loc=https%3A%2F%2Fpetapixel.com%2Ffeed%2F&out=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.instagram.com%2Freel%2FCV6KYIQo5GL%2F%3Futm_source%3Dig_embed%26utm_campaign%3Dloading)

    A post shared by @changed.mylife

    Can a photograph change your life? Multiple photographers pick the image that cast a spell on them – and made them reconsider their own way of doing things.

    Candid stories, presented alongside their chosen photographs, give unparalleled insights into the creative influences of contributors, including: Alec Soth, Don McCullin, Alex Prager, David Bailey, Duane Michals, Gregory Crewdson, Jack Davison, Joy Gregory, Mari Mahr, Megan Winstone, Nan Goldin, Takashi Arai, Valerie Sadoun, Zhang Kechun.

    Gillian Laub Explores Her Family 's Political Dramas – The New Yorker

    Grandpa helping Grandma out, Mamaroneck, NY 2000. The first photo Laub took of her family that was ever published © Gillian Laub, photo courtesy International Center of Photography

    New York-based photographer Gillian Laub's photos of her Jewish-American family saga feel both anguished and hopeful.

    "Photographing my family is a way for me to navigate my identity," Laub tells _The New Yorker. "_These are people, my people, who I have felt very much a part of, but also outside of, and I have been navigating that line since the moment I picked up the camera."

    In one photograph during the pandemic, Laub shows her parents standing outside a sliding glass door holding a balloon and cake and wishing her a happy birthday in a loving but also frustrating way.

    My cousin Jamie with a captive audience, Armonk, NY, 2003. © Gillian Laub, photo courtesy International Center of Photography

    Although the photos were captured over two decades, the most recent ones reveal the cracks in the family relationships over different political affiliations.

    My quarantine birthday, 2020. © Gillian Laub, photo courtesy International Center of Photography

    "The rise of Donald Trump, and her family's support for and even adulation of the man, puzzled and distressed the liberal photographer," writes The New Yorker.

    Gillian Laub Family Matters is on at The International Center of Photography till Jan 10, 2022.

    Travels With Boji: Istanbul 's Commuter Dog – The Atlantic

    Embed from Getty Images

    Boji, an Istanbul street dog, rides a subway train in Istanbul, Turkey, on October 21, 2021.

    From The Atlantic :

    Boji, a street dog living in Istanbul, Turkey, has become a popular sight on the city's subways, ferries, trams, and buses. Chris McGrath, a photographer with Getty Images, recently joined Boji as he made his rounds, during which he can travel as much as 30 kilometers [19 miles] a day. "Since noticing the dog's movements," McGrath says, "Istanbul Municipality officials began tracking his commutes via a microchip and a phone app. Most days, he will pass through at least 29 metro stations and take at least two ferry rides. He has learned how and where to get on and off the trains and ferries."

    Embed from Getty Images

    One of the World 's Leading Nature Photographers Hopes to Reconnect Readers to the Wild World Around ThemDaily Mail

    Panzer division, Kenya. To get this wide-angle, low-viewpoint image of a crash of rhinos, I lay motionless in a narrow ditch that was located in the direction they were heading. Their eyesight is quite poor, so they rely on their sense of hearing and smell. When they got really close to checking me out, I used silent mode on my Nikon Z7 to not startle them. Nikon Z7, 24-70/4.0, 1/500 @ f/8.0, ISO 500

    Mother: A Tribute to Mother Earth by photographer Marsel van Oosten and published by teNeues features more than 200 striking landscapes and wildlife images.

    Eternal adversaries, Japan. On average, the Steller's Sea eagle is the heaviest eagle in the world, at about 5–9 kg (11–20 lb.), and it is one of the largest raptors overall. They mainly feed on fish, but they occasionally prey on red fox and even small domestic dogs. Foxes often try to steal fish from the eagles, and this eagle was chasing it off for that reason. Nikon D500, 200-400/4.0, 1/3200 @ f/5.6, ISO 400.

    Mother contains mesmerizing pictures from Africa, the Americas, Asia, Europe, and Antarctica captured by Oosten over the past 15 years. He hopes that the images in this book will reconnect people to nature, make them realize that Mother Earth desperately needs our protection, and inspire them to take action.

    Facebook update, Japan. When a tourist got too close to a macaque to get some close-ups with her iPhone, the macaque snatched it from her hands and started playing with it in the hot spring. At some stage, it held it just like a human. This image has gone viral on the internet, and it is my most-stolen image. First Prize winner in the Wildlife Photographer of the Year. Nikon D800, 70-200/2.8, 1/250 @ f/7.1, ISO 800 Nightcap, Botswana. After spending a long afternoon in a hide next to a waterhole in the remote eastern corner of Botswana, it was getting too dark to photograph. As I was packing up, a leopard came down to drink, and I quickly got my camera out again. I used a small headlamp and bumped up the ISO to 51,200 to get this shot. Nikon D5, 70-200/2.8, 1/30 @ f/2.8, ISO 51200 © Marsel van Oosten

    Photos of '70s Halloween Trick-or-Treaters That Will Melt Your Cold Heart – BuzzFeed

    Group of Trick-or-Treaters © Larry Racioppo

    Larry Racioppo photographed Halloween in Brooklyn for years, capturing classic costumes from Star Wars characters to the Bride of Frankenstein.

    "I could drive a cab two days a week to cover rent ($125 in 1973), and the rest of the time, I practiced photography," Racioppo tells BuzzFeed .

    Bride of Frankenstein © Larry Racioppo

    He photographed all over Brooklyn but capturing Halloween in his neighborhood was his favorite.

    Three boys with tear makeup © Larry Racioppo

    Racioppo has donated a collection of about 100 photos to the New York Public Library's photo collection.

    Skeleton and ape © Larry Racioppo

    These photos are a journey back in time, to The Bionic Woman and Star Wars , before Elsa and Shrek.

    A Photographer on The Prowl Captured New York City 's Most Outrageous Halloween Costumes of 2021 —BuzzFeed

    Today's Halloween costumes shot by British photographer Adam Powell strike a marked difference from the ones of the '70s at the link one paragraph above.

    The Big Picture: Brutal Intimacy on the Streets of Tokyo with Bruce Gilden – The Guardian

    Businessman at lunchtime outside JR station, Tokyo, Japan, 1996 © Bruce Gilden / Magnum Photos

    From The Guardian :

    Bruce Gilden, infamous for his up-close, flashgun New York street photography, visited Japan several times in the 1990s. His pictures of Tokyo, collected in a new book, Cherry Blossom, share the brutal intimacy of his Manhattan archive. His camera has always sought out and ambushed characters, hard men, broken souls, desperate women.

    Many of his Japanese pictures are in the faces of Yakuza gangsters; one or two make you wonder how he lived to make the prints. Others go in search of people marginalized by Tokyo society: homeless drunks, aging sex workers, teenage biker gangs. The man in this photograph [above] is described as a "businessman at lunchtime," though, reaching into his breast pocket, he seems to carry much of the threat and menace of the more overtly violent of Gilden's subjects.

    Cherry Blossom by Bruce Gilden is published by Thames & Hudson

    Read also: ** A Chat with Bruce Gilden About Life, Work, and Photography**

    Why the Myth That Dark Skin Is Harder to Photograph Persists – Allure

    And how three photographers are pushing back against a bias that's existed since film was invented.

    "The film chemistry that creates color balance was not originally designed with yellow, brown, and reddish skin tones in mind, and such hues wouldn't even be considered until the 1970s," writes Allure.

    Read also: Here 's a Look at How Color Film was Originally Biased Toward White People

    Across Time with Photojournalist David Burnett - Sony Alpha Films

    David Burnett (b. 1946) is an American magazine photojournalist. His work from the 1979 Iranian revolution was published extensively in Time. He was a member of the Gamma photo agency and co-founded Contact Press Images. American Photo magazine named Burnett one of the 100 Most Important People in Photography. "That made his mom very happy," writes his website.

    Looking Back on Helmut Newton 's Legacy in Fashion Photography – Forbes

    Embed from Getty ImagesThe German-born fashion photographer Helmut Newton, born 101 years ago, changed photography with his iconoclastic ways.

    "He was no fit for British Vogue , but rather found a kinship with the risks that French Vogue was willing to take, at the time," writes Forbes. "Over the course of his 60-year career, Newton disrupted fashion photography from something perfect to elegant anarchy.

    " Fact: He created sexually-charged fashion photos in French Vogue in a time when they were risqué."

    Do Photographers Have to Learn Video? – Photofocus

    © Melissa Moody, 2021

    "With new still cameras bringing professional-level video to photographers, it is only a matter of time before people will ask us to make motion pictures," says photographer Kevin Ames in the article above.

    Canon started the revolution when they introduced HD video in the 5D Mark II in November of 2008, and still photographers realized that they already have a very useable video camera in their hands.

    For the still photographers of today, cinema-quality video is already readily available in the cameras they are using. Resolutions up to 8K and pro codecs are now becoming standard, as are higher frame rates for capturing slow motion. RAW video and Log profiles are also becoming more prevalent in pro still cameras.

    Raw Photos of Landfills Show the Extreme Amount of Waste Humans Produce - BuzzFeed

    Embed from Getty ImagesIn Kuwait, disposed of tires have been accumulating for about 20 years at this tires' graveyard, threatening the environment and human health due to hazardous components they contain.

    Where does all the trash go after you take it to the dumpster? The reality depicted in the images here showcases the current state of waste management and how the items we discard are piling up worldwide.

    Embed from Getty ImagesA Venezuelan migrant searches a rubbish dump for clothes for her and her children on the outskirts of Iquique, Chile.

    "1,825 pounds of trash per year: That's how much the average American produces, according to statistics by the Environmental Protection Agency," says Buzzfeed. "According to the agency's findings, food and paper top the rankings for types of waste going into landfills."

    Photo of the Week

    No, Don 't. We're on the Same Side!

    Embed from Getty ImagesSpot-billed pelican interact on the banks of an artificial lake in Colombo on September 28, 2021. (Photo by Ishara S. Kodikara/AFP via Getty Images)

    Quiz of the Week

    1.) JPEGmini has released update 3.3 for the image optimization app, which brings a long-requested feature to the software to:

    a.) Compress RAW still files
    b.) Reduce the size of video files
    c.) Reduce the size of audio files

    2.) Is it possible for a lens adapter to widen the angle of view of a lens?

    3.) Which is the first combined LED light and digital strobe? Hint: It does not have a conventional flash tube but fires the flashes via the LED.

    Answers

    1.) (b.) Reduce the size of video files. It supports the optimization of H.264(AVC) MP4 and MOV files, and users can expect up to a 50% file size reduction (30% on average, with peaks up to 80%).

    2.) Yes. A new Mitakon adapter for Nikon Z widens the angle (by 0.726x) of full-frame lenses on APS-C cameras.

    3.) The StellaPro Reflex. It can be used as an off-camera flash controlled remotely by Godox or Elinchrom triggers and fires up to 20 frames per second for extended periods without overheating.

    Why I Like This Photo – Meryl Meisler

    © Meryl Meisler

    I like this photo because it shows a person doing something private in public. A young woman is looking in a handheld mirror to apply face powder while riding a moving NYC subway train. We view the subject from over her left shoulder as her left hand grasps hold of the makeup mirror. In the reflection, we see her right hand applying powder with a cosmetic pad. She looks calmly into the mirror at her reflection, patting her skin while avoiding eye contact with the camera lens. The composition is a series of diagonal and parallel lines accentuated by the slightly off-center circular mirror. The close-up of her hands and face overlaps a young, bearded man wearing ear pods, holding a mobile device, staring off in another direction. A hooded figure crouches on the farthest seat of the train.

    There is a warm tone throughout the image. Orange seats and a small orange circle on the signage indicate to a regular subway rider that this is an F train. The woman wears gold-colored accessories -- a wristband, hoop earring, mirror, and handbag with gold metal details. The man with the earbuds has a warm orange cloth bag, the person in the distance wears a muted green hoodie. The only cool tone color in the composition is the seated figure's blue checked pants. An eerie yet incandescent light reflects throughout the train.

    I wasn't carrying a stand-alone camera when I saw this woman but knew it was an image I wanted to capture. I asked if I could take her photograph and post it on my Instagram account because I never saw anyone applying makeup just like that on a train. She replied yes and continued fixing her makeup while I used my iPhone XR using existing light to take this photo on November 21, 2019. I asked if she wanted me to tag her. She replied yes and typed @cocaine_waiitress directly onto my post. I applied the hashtag #onlyinny.

    Less than four months later, the world as we know it changed due to the pandemic. Now, everyone is required to wear masks on the NYC subways.

    The best camera is the one you have on you.

    Meryl Meisler (b.1951 South Bronx, NY) studied with Lisette Model while photographing her hometown and the city around her. After working as a freelance illustrator by day, Meisler frequented and photographed the infamous New York Discos. As a 1978 CETA Artist grant recipient, Meisler created a portfolio of photographs that explored her Jewish Identity for the American Jewish Congress. After CETA, she began a 3-decade career as an NYC Public School Art Teacher. Her latest monograph, New York PARADISE LOST Bushwick Era Disco is available here.

    ******Quote of the Week -- **Bruce Gilden

    © Bruce Gilden, Japan, 1998 / Magnum Photos

    The above photo is from Cherry Blossom by Bruce Gilden, published by Thames & Hudson.

    If you can't smell the street, it's not a street photograph. – Bruce Gilden

    Bruce Gilden joined Magnum Photos in 1998. His work has been exhibited widely around the world and is part of many permanent collections such as MoMA, New York; the Victoria and Albert Museum, London; and the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography. Contemporary American photographer Joel Meyerowitz has this to say about Gilden: "He's a f**king bully. I despise the work, I despise the attitude, he's an aggressive bully, and all the pictures look alike because he only has one idea— ‘I'm gonna embarrass you, I'm going to humiliate you.' I'm sorry, but no."

    To see an archive of past issues of Great Reads in Photography, click here.

    We welcome comments as well as suggestions. As we cannot possibly cover each and every source, if you see something interesting in your reading or local newspaper anywhere in the world, kindly forward the link to us here. ALL messages will be personally acknowledged.

    About the author : Phil Mistry is a photographer and teacher based in Atlanta, GA. He started one of the first digital camera classes in New York City at The International Center of Photography in the 90s. He was the director and teacher for Sony/Popular Photography magazine’s Digital Days Workshops. You can reach him via email here.

    Image credits: All photographs as credited and used with permission from the photographers or agencies. Portions of header photo via Depositphotos.

    #inspiration #news #elsewhere #greatreadfromthepast #greatreadsinphotography #grip #interestingreadings #links #philmistry #photographer #photographers #photooftheweek #quizoftheweek #quoteoftheweek #readings #recap #roundup #whyilikethisphoto

    Great Reads in Photography: November 7, 2021

    Every Sunday, we bring together a collection of easy-reading articles from analytical to how-to to photo features in no particular order that did not make