Probably the most crucial and trickiest part of shooting storms is planning. I usually look 24 hours in advance to see if there’s anything brewing in the forecast, but things can change quickly. In the past, I’ve seen a 100%… Read More ›
Photography
At Glacier’s End
This stunning coffee table book offers not only striking visuals, but an environmental and cultural message as well, following the conservation movement to preserve Iceland’s rivers so when borders do open to us again, we can all find the nation… Read More ›
Amazing restored photos
Have a look at the tweets of BabelColour. You will find some quite stunning restored photos that not only look amazing, but which have been restored in such a way that they really do not look restored. Thanks to Simon… Read More ›
Dimpy Bhalotia’s iPhone photos
For nearly a decade, photographer Dimpy Bhalotia has been using iPhones to document captivating street scenes in luscious black and white. She’s used almost every model Apple ever released — and this week, she took home top honors in the… Read More ›
FaceApp (spooky)
With lockdown tending to bring more time to the day I somehow ended up trying a silly photo app called FaceApp. It is a subscription app which puts me off because while I will happily pay for the likes of… Read More ›
Colorised footage from 1929 of construction workers
What an amazingly scary thing this is and for some reason it is doubly frightening in colour.
Atget’s Paris, 100 Years Later
Freed of people, the urban landscape has evoked an older Paris. In particular, it has called up the singular Paris of Eugène Atget, an early 20th-century father of modern photography in his unsentimental focus on detail… More here. These photos… Read More ›
Printing iPhone Photos Really Big
I also love shooting with phones. Photography for me is a way of connecting to nature and capturing the feeling I have when exploring amazing locations. A phone creates less of a barrier to capturing that moment. But what happens… Read More ›
The early days of home computing
There were no design conventions for the earliest home computers, no rules for how they’d look,” says Alex Wiltshire, author of Home Computers, a new book that explores the rapidly changing face of the household machine between its birth in… Read More ›
Nikon School Online goes free throughout April
Nikon’s mission has always been to empower creators. In these uncertain times, we can do that by helping creators stay inspired, engaged and growing. That’s why we’re providing all of our courses free for the entire month of April. Let’s… Read More ›