Archive for the 'Photography' Category

Surfing Photography by Stuart Gibson

Underwater Surfer by Stuart Gibson

Surfer in Barrel by Stuart Gibson

Sunset and Surfer by Stuart Gibson

Underwater Surf Board by Stuart Gibson

Wave underwater with surfer by Stuart Gibson

Huge wave, surfer on top by Stuart Gibson

Pho­tos taken in Tas­ma­nia and Aus­tralia by Stu­art Gib­son. See more of his work at Stugibson.net (via The Blog of Yoland).

2010 World Press Photo Winners


by Pietro Masturzo, Italy

2010 World Press Photo Winners

2010 World Press Photo Winners

2010 World Press Photo Winners

Lance Armstrong by Elizabeth Kreutz, USA.

Untitled by Jérôme Bonnet, France, for Libération.

by Nick Cobbing, United Kingdom, for Greenpeace International.

Mexico Drug War by Guillermo Arias, Mexico, The Associated Press.

Mohammed Salem, Palestinian Territories, Reuters.

See more at: Win­ners gallery 2010 — World Press Photo.


Color Photography in the Early 1900’s

Isfandiyar, Khan of the Russian

Melon vendor, Samarkand

Cotton textile mill interior with machines producing cotton thread, probably in Tashkent
Con­tinue read­ing ‘Color Pho­tog­ra­phy in the Early 1900’s’

Pictures of the Year International 2009

Running from Gas

Thirst

Untouchables of Asia

Kenyan policemen open fire at demonstrators

Mongolian Horse Races

Lost

We Made a Promise - Never Again

See more at: Pic­tures of the Year Inter­na­tional 2009 Win­ners Gallery

via LOOK: Pic­tures of the Year | GOOD

Kauai, Hawaii

"Maelstrom #3 - Kauai, Hawaii"  by PatrickSmithPhotographyMael­strom #3 –Kauai, Hawaii by Patrick­Smith­Pho­tog­ra­phy

Fire Jump

Fire Jump

Extreme Photography: Six Month Long Exposure

Six month exposure by Justin Quinnell

British pho­tog­ra­pher Justin Quin­nell is mak­ing waves with an amaz­ing six month expo­sure he made in Bris­tol, Eng­land of the sun ris­ing and falling over the city’s famous sus­pen­sion bridge.

He made the photo not with a fancy dig­i­tal cam­era but with an extremely rude, home­made device — a pin­hole cam­era made from an empty soda can with a .25mm hole punched in it and one sheet of photo paper inside. He strapped it to a tele­phone pole and left it there for six months, from Decem­ber 19, 2007 to June 21, 2008. If those dates sound famil­iar (or astro­nom­i­cally sig­nif­i­cant), they are — they’re the win­ter and sum­mer sol­stices, respectively.

The low­est arc in the photo is the sun’s trail on the short­est day of the year, the win­ter sol­stice. The high­est arc is the sum­mer sol­stice. The lines which are punc­tu­ated by dots rep­re­sent over­cast days when the sun pen­e­trated the clouds only intermittently.

via mental_floss Blog » The World’s Longest Expo­sures.

Darth Vader Has Pimped His Ride

Darth Vader in Car

Con­tinue read­ing ‘Darth Vader Has Pimped His Ride’

2008 in Pictures from the New York Times

The Bejing Olympics

Economic Trouble

Hurricane Ike

The American Ballet Theather's opening-night gala in May

Flooding in India

Hilary Clinton

Barack Obama in San Antonio

Earthquake Damage

The war in Iraq

More pho­tos from the New York Times can be found at: 2008 — The Year in Pictures