Ever wondered about the hardware it takes to photograph a shuttle launch?
By Tim Barribeau on May 2, 2013
NASA might not be in the business of launching space shuttles anymore, but its history is full of downright incredible feats. The iconic films of rockets roaring out of the base after a countdown became and important cultural milestone. But how were these stills and films captured? This video from the 1980s shows some of the wonderful and bizarre gear that was used to record these events.
A truly classic camera has come to the end of its production run
By Stan Horaczek on April 29, 2013
There are few cameras in the world as recognizable as Hasselblad's V-series. NASA even used one (the 500ELs) to take photographs on the moon. Their cube-shaped bodies have been around for more than half of a century and have been popular with pros to hipsters and everyone in between. Now, the final unit has rolled off the assembly line and the V-series is no more.
Not sure which way to go with Creative Commons? This flowchart should point you in the right direction
By Tim Barribeau on April 29, 2013
The Creative Commons licensing scheme is a tool that allows you to control just how your content is released into the wild. If you're okay with people using your images as long as you're credited, it's the way to go. But with six different licenses, how do you choose which one fits with what you want? This flow chart from Creative Commons Australia takes you through the steps to do just that.
For a really authentic tintype, why not go back to the original hardware used?
By Tim Barribeau on April 29, 2013
In recent years, there's been something a resurgence in tintype photography, resurrecting one of the oldest methods of taking a photo. But if you want to get really authentic, why stop at using just the old methods? Why not use the old gear too? Rob Gibson is a studio photographer in Gettysburg, PA who does exactly that: he takes tintype photographs using Civil War era cameras and lenses.
Andrea Gjestvang won the prestigious L’Iris d’Or for her portraits of the survivors of the July 2011 massacre at Utoeya.
By Tim Barribeau on April 26, 2013
Photographer Andrea Gjestvang has been awarded L’Iris d’Or as Photographer of the Year in the Sony World Photography Awards. Chosen unanimously by the judging panel, Gjestvang beat out 122,000 entries from 170 countries, to take away the title, alongside a $25,000 purse.
In the early 20th Century, there was a brief period where the military was taking enormous "living photographs"
By Tim Barribeau on April 25, 2013
There was a brief period, starting around 1918, where the military decided that a good way to use its trained soldiers was to create enormous, perspective corrected images out of them. Dubbed "living photographs", the technique was pioneered by Arthur Mole, and sometimes involved tens of thousands of people to craft these massive compositions.
Everyone's on heightened alert since the Boston Bombings, but is banning cameras going to help anything?
By Tim Barribeau on April 24, 2013
In the wake of the Boston Marathon bombings, security is on the rise at most public events. Many of the new rules make some degree of sense, like banning coolers and purses larger than 12-inches, and increased electronic wand checks at gates to the venue. But one new regulation seems to make no sense at all. As reported by USA Today
According to reports, Facebook is trialing presenting images on the social network through a different format, moving away from the widely supported JPEG into a more obscure format called WebP.
By combining photographs with multiple focal depths, this app replicates something like light field technology
By Tim Barribeau on April 23, 2013
Ever since the announcement of the Lytro camera, the idea of being able to select the focus point in an image after the fact has been intriguing some photographers. We've seen that same concept replicated by using a video file from a manually focussed DSLR, but a new app brings something similar to the iPhone.