via: Leopard seal teaches photographer how to catch penguins – Boing Boing
Editor's Choice
- Sports Shooter Newsletter Decade Collection
- The Visual Student » Photos of the Year/Decade: Part 2
- Our Troops Send Holiday Wishes For Peace, Goodwill, And Body Armor
- The Visual Student » Photos of the Year/Decade: Part 1
- 2009: The Year in Pictures – The New York Times
- lenscratch: Rafal Milach
- Clicks of the Year: 2009 In Review
- The decade in news photographs – The Big Picture
- Video: Trent Parke and Narelle Autio | dvafoto
- The Year in Media Errors and Corrections | Regret the Error
- 2009 in photos (part 3 of 3) – The Big Picture
- Showcase: West Into East – Lens
- 2009 in photos (part 1 of 3) – The Big Picture
- face time « shooting from the hip
- lenscratch: Mark Laita
- Consequences by NOOR.
- Best Multimedia Story From Atlanta Photojournalism Seminar
- Rimaldas Viksraitis: Grimaces of the Weary Village – The Observer
- Showcase: Black and Very White – Lens
- The Long Haul – The Digital Journalist
- Happy Freakin’ Holidays Playlist – WFMU
- On Assignment: Afghanistan in Free Fall – Lens
- Platon: Photographs of World Leaders : The New Yorker
- The Visual Student » Dave LaBelle, The Lesson
- 100Eyes: Beware the Consequences of War | 100 Eyes Photo Magazine
Categories
- Access
- Art & Design
- Audio & Podcasts
- Blogs & Websites
- Books
- Contests
- Copyright
- Daily Most Clicked
- Editor's Choice
- Equipment
- Ethics
- Film & TV
- Gaming
- Interviews
- Journalism
- Leica
- Link Lists
- Music
- News
- Obituaries
- Paparazzi
- Photography
- Photojournalism
- Polygamy
- Portfolios, Essays & Galleries
- Pranks
- Punk Rock
- Software & Technology
- Sports
- Technique & Workflow
- Video & Multimedia
- War




Recent Comments
Trent, thanks for this and all of your shout outs this past year, Douglas Stockdale & The PhotoBook.
Love the simplicity..
Thanks for the shout out. I appreciate it..
those are all in northern california. stop trying to take credit for everything norcal does, southern california
True, but you are still leading the viewer through your inevitable role as photographer. Where you print and display your image is where your power of mitigating the responses of your audience ceases. Still, I do think that in your photography, you’ve created a consistent way of seeing that you share with your audience. The subject matter might be random, but there is intended perspective inherent in each shot. How your audience takes it is of course subjective – but it’s because of the new view that....