Walter Astrada/TIME Magazine
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As I sit there, dreaming of this new Noctilux, I get an e-mail from none other than SEAL. Not only is he an accomplished music artist with a career spanning almost 20 years (his new CD “SOUL” is brilliant), but he is also a talented photographer who is lucky enough to own some of the best glass in the world, including the new Noctilux as well as the Leica 24 1.4 Summilux.
in Leica
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Stephen Mallon might be sitting on some of the most newsworthy pictures never seen.
in Copyright
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Richard Jones/sinopix/sinopix-
Fifteen year-old Lou Li poses. Lou Li spent 8 months forcibly married to a farmer in Yunnan, West China. Lou Li was tricked away from her home and sold to the farmer for 6,500 rnb in September 2006 and escaped in April 2007.
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Melissa Lyttle/St. Petersburg Times-
For the first seven years of her life, Danielle never saw the sun, felt the wind or tasted solid food. She was kept in a closet in a Plant City apartment, cloistered in darkness, left in a dirty diaper, fed only with a bottle. “She was a ferral child,” said Carolyn Eastman of the Tampa heart Gallery. “We’d never seen a case like that.”
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Thinking you’re done because you’ve moved your photos onto a DVD is not a good policy to take; it’s a mistake. And the reason is that the lifespan of DVDs varies from 5 to 100 years, according to testing. And if you leave it on your hard disk, well, hard disks only last five years, generally.
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“Cops are like a doctor that gives you aspirin for a brain tumor, except that the cop would rather cure it with a blackjack.”
“A few locks of dry white hair clung to his scalp, like wild flowers fighting for life on a bare rock.”
“The minutes went by on tiptoe, with their fingers to their lips.”
“His smile was as stiff as a frozen fish.”
“He was a guy who talked with commas, like a heavy novel.”
And, a personal favorite: “It was a blonde. A blonde to make a bishop kick a hole in a stained glass window.”
in Books
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One of the reasons I started this blog was to share my photographic experiences with other photographers. A major part of that experience is the business side of photography and in times like these how we, as photographers, as freelancers, as journalists deal with our clients is the of the utmost importance. Placing a value on our time, or vision, our creativity is getting harder and harder to do with magazines cutting budgets and work drying up.
in Photography
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If you have the slightest interest in computer drawing tablets, you need to see this thing.
in Equipment
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we decided to talk with last year’s grant recipient, Beijing-based documentary photographer Sean Gallagher, about his winning project, tips on submissions, and how the grant has impacted his work.
in Interviews
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Yesterday’s remix challenge — to mock the ridiculous new “anti-terrorism” posters the London police have put up that tell you to spy on your neighbors — was a smashing success.
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Carl Kiilsgaard/Western Kentucky University –
The White family has lived outside of Whitesburg, Ky., for generations.
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CLICK NOTE: Great to see this amazing shot get a first place. Only an award of excellence from POYi? Come on!photo by Eric Kayne/Houston Chronicle
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Carol Guzy/The Washington Post-
“Every minute, every hour, pregnant women die in Sierra Leone,” says Amadu Sesay, brother of Jemelleh Saccoh who arrived with her aunt at Princess Christian Maternity Hospital in Freetown with pregnancy complications for an emergency Caesarean section.
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Tom Arndt’s Minnesota is a book forty years in the making. These thirteen black and white images by the native Minnesotan are selected from among the 100 plates in his new book, what he calls “a poem to my home state.”
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At a second look, however, you can feel there’s something strange about the photos, although you do not know what.
in Photography