Free work – yay! — duckrabbit
Anyone fancy a job? There’s loads here you can be getting on with… Please don’t apply if you are the…
via duckrabbit: http://duckrabbit.info/blog/2010/01/free-work-yay/
Anyone fancy a job? There’s loads here you can be getting on with… Please don’t apply if you are the…
via duckrabbit: http://duckrabbit.info/blog/2010/01/free-work-yay/
Quick and easy way to make a stop-motion movie.
Link: Tuesday Tech stuff with Tim — Stop-Motion Workflow | Luceo Images
Link: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/01/18/AR2010011803488.html?wprss=rss_world
Have a look at the “trailer” for Stanley Greene’s new book Black Passport, a deeply personal journal of life and a career in conflict. Or perhaps it is, as compiled by Teun van der Heijden, a biography.
Michael Appleton covered the 2004 coup in Haiti and Hurricane Katrina. He sees something of both in the present disaster, though on a far greater scale.
via Lens Blog: http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/01/18/behind-29/
So………… It seems the thing people talk most about with cameras today is ISO performance. So here is some examples/tests of the D3s & 1D4 ISO perform
Remember the days when a 5 megapixel digital camera was considered top-of-the-line? I do. Remember the days when 570 megapixel digital cameras were the
There are many ways one can donate to the relief effort in Haiti. I wanted to draw your attention to One Respe a magazine idea spearheaded by San Francisco photographer Lane Hartwell.
Kashi is a photojournalist, filmmaker and educator. His award-winning work spans from high-end print photojournalism to experimental film.
via Telegraph.co.uk: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/photography/7017938/Ed-Kashi.html
I like this. From the press release: Professional photographers are offering a special edition fundraising magazine through the Magcloud print-on-demand service to benefit victims of the recent earthquake in Haiti. The magazine features work from preemine
via A Photo Editor: http://www.aphotoeditor.com/2010/01/18/a-photographic-benefit-for-the-survivors-of-the-haiti-earthquake/
Try to get a job as official White House photographer. You’ll pretty much eat history for breakfast, lunch and dinner. You are there with one of the most powerful people in the world as much as he lets you.
But it’s a strange gig. You’re not so much a journalist as a real-time archivist — many of your images won’t see the light of day until after the president you are photographing has left office.
Link: LBJ Museum takes a rare look at the men who chronicled the intimate details of the office
Haiti remains a place of profound need, anguish, desperation and danger, with a few glimmers of hope and slowly growing capabilities to receive and distribute the international aid now flowing in. Sporadic looting, sometimes violent, was met with force by
via Boston.com: http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/01/haiti_six_days_later.html
Update: Nikon USA corrected their website, the smoke remains. Just a clarification on the Nikon TC-17E III teleconverter: this rumor is not based on the Nikon website listing that could be a typo (two typos in two sentences?): I received the information a
Damon Winter asks the same question that is constantly asked of him. Viewers are cautioned that this slide show includes very disturbing images.
via Lens Blog: http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/01/17/assignment-20/
“There’s nothing ‘in a box’ that solves our requirements,” Straight said. “NPPA’s unique Web site needs – eCommerce and our contests and editorial content – will require customized development … as well as integrating the old with the new.”
“The wrong decision about what to do with their Web site has ruined many companies,” new board member Smiley Pool said. “The most difficult task [facing NPPA] is the development challenge,” Pool said.
Link: Board Approves $1.4m Budget, Plans For NPPA’s Future, Web Site
A reporter, driven out of Iran, returns via the Internet and finds herself freer to write about the meaning of events back in her homeland.
Link: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/17/weekinreview/17fathi.html?ref=weekinreview
Catherine Lainé of the sustainable tech non-profit AIDG, who was featured in this Boing Boing Video interview on Friday, is in Haiti and has begun uploading photos of what she’s witnessing th…
Italy’s Berlusconi regime, already known around the world as an enemy of free speech and popular access to the tools of communication, has now floated a proposal to require Italians to get an…
An exhibition at the Zimmerli Art Museum in New Brunswick explores the work of four Soviet photographers in the decades before Communism fell.
Link: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/17/nyregion/17artsnj.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
After spending the morning clicking through the latest photos from Haiti, I can’t seems to get my thoughts off of what is going on there. The images coming back spew a long list contradictory adjectives. Beautiful. Ugly. Revealing. Tragic. Hopeful. Insightful. Disgusting. Amazing. Every click of the mouse is another rectangle that holds more human suffering within the four walls of its shape that I don’t want to ever see again, and can’t get enough of.