From SFGate: Daily Dish : Woody Harrelson likens paparazzo to zombie:
Harrelson says he was “still very much in character” when he was met by the photographer, who, he adds, he mistook for a zombie.
From SFGate: Daily Dish : Woody Harrelson likens paparazzo to zombie:
Harrelson says he was “still very much in character” when he was met by the photographer, who, he adds, he mistook for a zombie.
From Obituary: Peter Goldfield | The Guardian:
Peter Goldfield, who has died of heart failure aged 63, was the godfather of independent photography in Britain, where he and his great friend Paul Hill started the idea of photography workshops.
From THE ZEN OF FILM vs. DIGITAL GRATIFICATION « doug menuez 2.0: go fast, don’t crash:
“Mulling it over, I couldn’t articulate it fully but definitely, I knew I had become lazy, really lazy. A spectacular sloth by the standards of shooting film. Film is hard. Film is a stone cold unforgiving killing bastard. Film is once in a lifetime, no excuses. F8 and really, really be there: ready, steady, in focus, correct exposure, and pressing the shutter in synch with life.”
From About Those New CrunchPad Pictures:
The goal – a very thin and light touch screen computer, sans physical keyboard, that has no hard drive and boots directly to a browser to surf the web. The operating system exists solely to handle the hardware drivers and run the browser and associated applications. That’s it.
From Gay Weddings: Growing Opportunity?:
To a growing number of wedding photographers, same‑sex weddings are a matter of good politics. And good business.
From DOUBLE CROSS: Pat Longrie part II:
The Dead Kennedys, Minor Threat, MDC and the Zero Boys played a show at “Old Town” in Westminster, California in 1983…the most powerful, electric, eclectic bill I ever saw. Old Town was where the Oktoberfest festival occurred each year so it was, to say the least, an odd partnership to begin with. The Zero Boys from Indiana were smoking. I had never heard of them before but they ripped. MDC was fantastic. Minor Threat was it.
From Street photography and the law :: Photocritic photography blog:
The law can essentially be summed up like this:
1. You can take a picture of anything you see – especially when you are in public.
From the Telegraph:
Steve Back, the photographer who took the picture of Bob Quick’s briefing note on the terror raids in the north west of England, has embarrassed the Government before.
From lens culture: Obama’s People by Nadav Kander:
Shortly after the 2008 election of Barack Obama — but prior to his inauguration — The New York Times Magazine commissioned a series of 52 portraits of the advisers, aides, cabinet secretaries-designate, and other key people who were being assembled to become members of Obama’s incoming administration. UK-based photographer Nadav Kander was chosen for this daunting project.
From dispatches: Sound control for 5D video–almost here:
BeachTek is happy to announce their new DXA-5D XLR adapter that has been highly anticipated for the Canon 5D Mark II camera.
From The Doctor is In – A Photography Blog.:
The rapatronic camera is a high-speed camera capable of recording a still image with an exposure time as brief as 10 nanoseconds (billionths of a second).
From Cameras With Time-Machine Powers – Pogue’s Posts Blog – NYTimes.com:
You can snap a still while filming video, and you can also change slow-mo speeds while filming, flipping between 30 and 210 frames per second with the touch of a button. Very, very cool.
From The dark side of Dubai – The Independent:
Dubai was meant to be a Middle-Eastern Shangri-La, a glittering monument to Arab enterprise and western capitalism. But as hard times arrive in the city state that rose from the desert sands, an uglier story is emerging. Johann Hari reports
From Is Your Web Designer Full of Crap? – A Picture’s Worth:
Your website design isn’t just for people who visit it. The fundamental construction of the website can help attract visitors even if they don’t know who you are.
From Early Bird Workshop Kicks Off At SSA VI:
“You folks (sports photographers) out of any workshop I go to, should understand this. It’s competition. If I was talking to studio portrait photographers, they wouldn’t know what I was talking about. You gotta beat them,” speaker Dave Black said, referring to capturing better action and trying innovative techniques to create images that other people don’t have.