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Instagram is making a move to be more like its owner, Facebook. In a blog post today, the popular social network said it would begin algorithmically sorting posts to surface what it thinks you want to see, irrespective of when that content is posted. Acco
Antonio Aragón Renuncio of Spain has won the $120,000 grand prize in the Hamdan International Photography Award (HIPA) competition in Dubai. The theme of the competition was “Happiness.” Aragón won the prize for an image of happy kids chasing motorcycle t
On December 10th, 2015, Feature Shoot hosted the third edition of The BlowUp, a quarterly event in which we ask a selected group of photographers to each tell the stories behind one of their favorite images. This time, the theme was Viral Images, and phot
Koudelka: Shooting Holy Land, the debut documentary film of Israeli-born photographer Gilad Baram, offers a unique and intimate look into the creative process of world-renowned Czech photographer Josef Koudelka.
the announcement of the winner of the 1st edition of the International Photography Prize: Santu Mofokeng, from South Africa, to whom the exhibit “A Silent Solitude. Photographs 1982-2011” at the Foro Boario (March 6th-May 8th 2016) has been dedicated.
Many people living in L.A. often see the city from behind the steering wheel of a car. As a taxi driver, Erik Hagen saw it almost exclusively that way.
When both her parents faced cancer together, Nancy Borowick chronicled their daily struggles and everyday moments at home. Now she is seeking to publish a book that chronicles not just their illnesses and deaths, but their lives as a family.
“Future’s made of virtual insanity now Always seem to be govern’d by this love we have For useless, twisting, our new technology Oh, now there is no sound – for we all live underground” – Virtual Insanity, Jamiroquai I spent the better part of last week b
Imagine seeing a photograph of a baby zebra sleeping peacefully atop the head of an adult tiger. Sounds crazy, right? Now imagine that same crazy image
In the five years after the devastating earthquake and tsunami, Hiroko Masuike has followed the Sato family, whose members drifted apart as they struggled to recover and rebuild.
Originally trained as a marine biologist, Thomas Peschak transitioned from the field in 2004 in order to pursue a discipline he felt was even more effective in ocean conservation efforts: photojournalism. Peschak is now a photographer for National Geographic Magazine and the Director of Conservation for the Save our Seas Foundation. He has been named as one of the 40 most influential nature photographers in the world.