Archive for the 'Great Photos' Category

07
Jun

Press Photographer’s Year competition

Boy, they seem so young.
clipped from www.guardian.co.uk

The results of the Press Photographer’s Year competition for 2008 saw several Guardian photographers recognised, with Sean Smith winning the multimedia category to add to his successes in the British Press and Royal Television Society journalism awards. Smith’s winning entry consisted of stills and video from his time spent with US troops in Baghdad last year. The Press Photographer’s Year, organised in association with the British Press Photographers’ Association, is a competition for photographers working around the world. For full results go to www.thepressphotographersyear.co

Baghdad, Iraq. An American soldier attached to Stryker units and Iraqi soldiers at an Iraqi Army post in Amiriya, a Sunni neighbourhood in west Baghdad allegedly controlled by Al Qaida. One Iraqi is praying.
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20
Feb

Macro Photography with a Ring Flash

Check out this post from Instructor Insights:

by Jim Zuckerman

Last week I photographed poison dart frogs, as well as some other fascinating creatures, in anticipation of setting up a macro workshop where the subjects will be reptiles and amphibians. These frogs are intriguing. They are very beautiful and very, very small — one of them could sit comfortably on a dime — and it was obvious to me that I needed a flash because I’d be shooting at my smallest lens aperture, f/32, for maximum depth of field. The problem, of course, is that my 580 EX Canon flash sat too high on the camera body and the light would go over the top of the frog. Even with a specialized bracket that held the flash right above the lens, I was afraid the light wouldn’t illuminate the underside of my subjects and I’d be facing serious contrast issues.

I solved the problem with a ring flash. The Canon MR-14EX has two small flash units inside the ring, and this allows you to actually create a lighting ratio. The flash output is diffused for a soft look, and the only problem I knew I’d face was a reflection in the eye from the ring of light. This would have to be touched up in Photoshop — there was no way around it.

The macro workshop will be announced in my free newsletter that I send out every month. If you would like to sign up for this newsletter, visit my website: jimzuckerman.com and on the home page fill in your email address in the appropriate box.

(from: Macro Photography with a Ring Flash)

30
Jan

Ali Bora’s “ARBOREAL ALLEGORY”

I wonder if they have forgotten the children?
clipped from picasaweb.google.com

17
Jan

Meditation and Photography

I love this style of photography.
clipped from www.lehet.com
Looking deeply, in love with awareness itself. And what is this awareness that exists beyond any idea of a self? How to nurture it, cultivate it? Meditation helps, and I think photography is good too.
I’ve meditated for all of my adult life (with a few breaks) — from age 14 — and very early in my photography I noticed that there was of course an interplay between meditation and the process of seeing and making photographs. As life and these practices go along, it becomes more and more absurd to make distinctions between the two. In some sense this is an artificial distinction here, as I consider most of my photographs to reflect my “good eye” and years of development of my contemplative practices. They are all about looking deeply.

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