The impact of war is, of course, devastating to all aspects of life in the affected areas, and the normal course of life is impossible during wartime. We
David Muto on Bill Manbo, whose color photographs document everyday life at a Japanese-American internment camp in Wyoming during the Second World War.
Having studied mainstream Archaeology, I came to the conclusion long ago that the stifling requirements of this discipline were not providing an overall picture; that one really needs to be part of a multidisciplinary team. I have been fortunate enough to travel globally in my quest for connective information that backs up my theories of lost civilizations. By Guest Writer Anne Tittinsor
Spread the loveDuring the Renaissance, many artists came out of the shadows. And so many...
Photographs of 1960s Ireland. The National Library of Ireland is home to a terrific collection of snapshot depictions of 1960s Ireland. Thanks to readers writing in we know the names of many of the faces in these photographs. Dates and locations transport us to a vibrant Dublin city and the lush Irish countryside. … Continue reading "Fabulous Snapshots Of 1960s Ireland"
It wasn't so long ago that American corporate CEOs were professing their devotion to Ayn Rand's potboiler "Atlas Shrugged" as though it were a badge of unsentimental industrial muscularity.
David Muto on Bill Manbo, whose color photographs document everyday life at a Japanese-American internment camp in Wyoming during the Second World War.
Explore M.R.7's 1397 photos on Flickr!
This daguerreotype of sisters Caroline and Sarah Barrett, daughters of Englishman Dicky Barrett and his wife Wakaiwa Rawinia, granddaughter of paramount Te Āti Awa chief Tautara, was taken by Lawson Insley in late 1852 or early 1853. It is one of the earliest known photographic portraits of Mā...
In pursuit of the American dream...
I noticed the other day that I have quite a stash of "famous knitter" photos, so here they all are in that wonderful odd-coupling you sometimes get with an otherwise random bunch of people connected only by one thing. First...
In pursuit of the American dream...
I noticed the other day that I have quite a stash of "famous knitter" photos, so here they all are in that wonderful odd-coupling you sometimes get with an otherwise random bunch of people connected only by one thing. First...
In pursuit of the American dream...
Built in 1964, the span still stands as Americas’ largest suspension bridge
While photographing a bird migration at Whitewater Draw, Arizona, I used long exposures to create abstract bird photos that conveyed the utter chaos taking place.
Trentham Gardens.
If the human imagination can dream it, architects and builders can construct it! From the humble to the extravagant, there is no limit to the uniqueness and creativity of buildings found around the world.
Long exposure photography like UK photographer Darren Moore's is the polar opposite of the super fast, super sensitive in low light kind of photography
Use this guide to learn all about long exposure photography and the tips and tricks behind capturing beautiful long exposure photos.
Social media may be the poster child of the 21st century, but the ideas behind LinkedIn and Facebook go back a long, long way. Dutch PhD scholar Sophie Reinders is currently exploring how personal books from many centuries ago known as alba amicorum – Latin for “friend books” – functioned as a sort of pre-dated version of our modern social…
Together for eight years, the band became a viral sensation overnight after their debut on the “Late Show With David Letterman.”
Photos Of Slum Life And Squalor In London 1969-72 (Volume 2)
Small corners (sepia) by Edgar Monzón on Fivehundredpx
There was a heat wave in 1906 throughout the whole of the British Isles, quite late in the year at the end of August and the early days of September. Edward Linley Sambourne went to the coast as th…
While photographing a bird migration at Whitewater Draw, Arizona, I used long exposures to create abstract bird photos that conveyed the utter chaos taking place.
The daguerrotype was the first commercially successful photographic process that immortalized many types at the turn of the century. Here's a collection of young students, posed stiff and smile-less for the camera in 1840. And if you don't get the title reference check out My Daguerreotype Boyfriend—handsome young daguerreotypes. via Daguerrotype at Harvard
Long exposure photography has the potential to inject life even into the most mundane scenes. Take the following example of the long exposure of a highway in Madrid for instance. Something that gives the impression of a noisy environment otherwise, appears soothing in the long exposure taken by photographer Adrian Aparicio: The image is a […]
Photographs of 1960s Ireland. The National Library of Ireland is home to a terrific collection of snapshot depictions of 1960s Ireland. Thanks to readers writing in we know the names of many of the faces in these photographs. Dates and locations transport us to a vibrant Dublin city and the lush Irish countryside. … Continue reading "Fabulous Snapshots Of 1960s Ireland"