• CLICK NOTE: Not that anyone is asking me to, but remind me never to agree to be a judge at POYi.

    Check it out here.


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    Some cool rundowns on the workflow of a few photographers, including some serious flowchart work. Nice…

    BRAD MANGIN’S EDITORIAL PHOTOGRAPHY WORKFLOW

    ARCHIVE, WEBSITE, & MARKETING: THE ALL-IN-ONE PHOTOGRAPHY WORKFLOW OF JOCK FISTICK

    JENSEN LARSON’S WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY WORKFLOW

    IPHOTOLIVE’S PHOTOGRAPHY WORKFLOW: DESIGNED FOR MASS DISTRIBUTION


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  • “When you’re working on a film, it’s almost like photographing paintings at a museum,” says Mary Ellen Mark, now 68 and dressed entirely in black, with twin braids over her shoulders. “You’re photographing somebody else’s world. I just try and interpret it and make it real, and make it what the actors are about, what the director is about, and what the film is about.”

    Check it out here.


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    Brian Kosoff was a top advertising photographer for 25 years, up until the beginning of the end of advertising photography’s golden age. As he watched photographers’ incomes drop and overhead costs rise, he found a way to transition to the world of fine-art landscape photography. Here he talks about the roots of the challenges advertising photographers still face.

    Check it out here.


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    Mikhael Subotzky is one of Magnum’s youngest and newest members, and his first book Beaufort West was one of my favourite photography books last year. I got interested in talking to Mikhael after seeing the book and reading a comment he had left on Magnum’s blog, under a post about photojournalism.

    Check it out here.


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  • “The cop wanted my ID, and I showed it to him,” Mr. Taylor said. “He told me I couldn’t take the pictures. I told him that’s not true, that the rules permitted it. He said I was wrong. I said, ‘I’m willing to bet your paycheck.’ ”

    Mr. Taylor was right. The officer was enforcing a nonexistent rule. And if recent experience is any guide, one paycheck won’t come close to covering what a wrongful arrest in this kind of case could cost the taxpayers.

    Check it out here.


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    Canon today announced an update to their line-up of tilt-shift lenses, giving more control to the existing 24mm f/3.5 TS lens, and more impressively introducing a 17mm f/4L, by far the widest tilt-shift lens made for the 35mm system.

    Check it out here.


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  • Under an idiotic new law, photographers in the UK can be stopped and their cameras, memory cards and film seized:

    Check it out here.


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    Isn’t it ironic that Facebook, which is so often used by groups of people to protest and demand changes for just about anything, has reverted to its former Terms Of Services under pressure of the community?

    Check it out here.


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    As the judging of the Picture of the Year International contest is now ongoing, winners are now being announced and posted at the POYi site. Judging from some of the winning images so far, I’ll tell you that there will be a lot of discussion (as there is every year) about the state of contest judging. (And I didn’t enter, so no sour grapes here.)

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    Check it out here.


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    The Americans showed a different America than the wholesome, nonconfrontational photo essays offered in some popular magazines. Robert Frank’s subjects weren’t necessarily living the American dream of the 1950s: They were factory workers in Detroit, transvestites in New York, black passengers on a segregated trolley in New Orleans. Frank didn’t even get much support from the art world, he recalls.

    “The Museum of Modern Art wouldn’t even sell the book,” Frank says. “But the younger people caught on.”

    Check it out here.


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  • Hey its mid-February so it must be time to check out the winners from World Press Photo.

    I gotta say quite emphatically that this year’s choices are completely and utterly disappointing, especially in comparison to some really kick ass stuff from last year. And I’ve heard this feeling echoing thru discussions in many photo circles and message boards already.
    Just a whole lot of redundancy and cliche

    Check it out here.


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    Just last week, President Obama was asked at a news conference if he would allow coverage of the flag-draped coffins arriving at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware “so the American people can see the full human cost of war.”

    Check it out here.


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    A week ago, our reporter posed as a juju priest who was in dire need of human body parts for urgent rituals. After about four hours of waiting and being passed from one “contact” to another, and played around like ping-pong, the reporter got a dealer who “booked” him. The rule here is, if you want a fresh human body part, you book and wait. If your order is for dry parts you get instant delivery.

    Check it out here.


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    Just a quick post here. The World Press Photo Awards were announced yesterday. One winner caught my eye. The work of Roger Cremers document the tourist behaviours at Auschwitz-Birkenau. It is a tricky topic to deal with, especially in a photography climate that frequently pours cynicism and scorn on global tourism (Martin Parr’s brilliantly garish work trail-blazed this climate).

    Check it out here.


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