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  • How I Shot This Flight School

    A look at what's behind those funny little hats

    Born in Houston, TX, Brian Finke, 31, photographs subcultures. Though he has a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the School of Visual Arts in New York, he considers himself a documentarian, and has chronicled the lives of body builders, cheerleaders, football players and, for the past two and a half years, flight attendants. His personal projects and his editorial work often intersect (these images were shot for CITY magazine), and his photographs have appeared in Entertainment Weekly, Premiere, Rolling Stone, The New Yorker, and Time, among others.

  • Marooned Leica M8 Lovers?

    Flaws in the new Leica M8 spark colorful debate.

    Leica's long-awaited 10.3MP M8 ($4,800, street price, body only) went on sale earlier this month, just days after most magazines (including Popular Photography and Imaging) and online reviewers got their final production samples for testing. Shortly thereafter, at least one major web-reviewer posted his positive review of the camera without mentioning a serious image quality flaw that had reared its head during field tests -- apparently doing so at the request of Leica.

  • How to Photograph Snowflakes

    A dedicated photographer makes snowflakes hot - and shows you how.

    "No two snowflakes are alike." It's a phrase repeated so often that most of us accept it as fact. But, as Julie Falk points out, it's not a scientific idea at all -- it was simply a theory posited in 1898 by Wilson Bentley, the very first snowflake photographer, who captured close to 5,000 crystals in his lifetime.
    "The idea has always fascinated me," the 49-year-old schoolteacher, from Clinton, MI, explains. "So I decided to look for two that were alike."

  • 2006 Holiday Gift Guide

    For this year's Holiday Gift Guide, we asked some of our friends in the photographic community to help us put together our master Wish List -- who better than industry pros who are constantly surrounded by cameras and gear to tell us what's hot? Below, you'll find gift suggestions from our expert panel, as well as some items we thought you should definitely consider as you shop for yoursel -- er -- your loved ones. All prices are approximate, based on online vendors.
    Happy Holidays and Happy Shopping from the staff of PopPhoto.com!

  • Where to Shoot in December

    Where to go and what to shoot in December.

    MANATEES
    When: Throughout December.
    Where: Crystal River National Wildlife Refuge, Crystal River, FL.
    What: More than 250 of these slow-moving, giant mammals spend their winters in the warm waters of Crystal River. The refuge is accessible only by boat, but guides will point out manatee hotspots.
    Tip: The best time to catch the manatees is from 7 to 10 a.m., when they venture out of the sanctuary to feed. Wade into the water, and wait for them to approach you.

  • DSLR 101

    Helping beginners go from "Now what!?" to how-to

    DIGITAL SLRS WILL BE one of the top gifts this holiday season. According to the market research firm NPD Group Inc., 1.8 million DSLRs will be sold in the U.S. by year-end. In 2007, the number is expected to reach 2.3 million units.
    With so much photographic horsepower going into the hands of so many people, there are bound to be questions. Billions of questions. Even from those who never stray from the full-auto "green mode" and use their new DSLRs as high-powered point-and-shoots.

  • How to Get 'Real' B&W Look from Color Photos

    Add a new dimension to your black-and-white photos.

    Do your black-and-whites look flat? The best monochrome prints have a dirty little secret: color. To get that "real" black-and-white look, use Adobe Photoshop's Channel Mixer to go monochrome, then add tone with Variations. Soon your friends will be wondering why your b&w photos look so much better than theirs do.
    Click here to launch Debbie's step-by-step instructions on converting color images to black-and-white.

  • Sky's the Limit

    Klaus Leidorf offers a bird's eye view from his Cessna 172.

    "Ever since iI was a young boy I liked to take photos," Klaus Leidorf says. "Now I do it from the air."
    The 50-year-old shooter, from Bonn, Germany, is an aerial archaeologist, meaning he conducts archaeological surveys from the window of his Cessna 172.

  • Photography on the Couch

    You don't have to be crazy to be a photographer, but...

    "Basically, everybody who can take pictures, does. This is something really, really deep," says Dimitrios Deliz, a leading photo industry analyst. "Why did digital photography take off so fast? Why does 80 percent of the population take pictures? It must be something close to our being."
    Those beings number 240 million and counting (80 percent of 300 million), in the U.S. alone.

  • How to Digitize Slides

    Here are three easy methods for bringing your dusty old slides up to date.

    Got stacks of slide carousels loaded with holiday, vacation, and other family memories? Those trays hold too much personal history to be tossed, but in their current analog state, all those images are just too bulky, dusty, and, well, old-fashioned to bother with.
    Your best bet? Usher these memories into the 21st century by digitizing and burning them to DVDs. You have three choices: Use a slide duplicator on your digital SLR, scan them, or outsource the task to a slide duping house.
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    SLIDE DUPLICATOR