Don’t you just love a good old-fashioned photographic shootout? Giving yourself a new challenge is not only fun, but it’s a fantastic way to unleash your creativity: you either sink or swim. In the Ultimate Mamiya Battle from banksi, we see three photographers battling it out with each other on the streets of Sydney. The premise of the challenge is simple: three photographers,
How to Take Care of Your Scalp to Promote Healthy Hair Growth wiredprnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wiredprnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Photoshoot styled by Cowprint for mĀK Collective
Ua Hayes, Howard University News Service
Cowprint, a Washington D.C.-based Black woman owned brand and organization, dropped their spring 2021 collection in February. Cowprint is an indie resale shop specializing in unique thrifted finds, custom creations, and vintage statement fashion. The brand launched in summer of 2019 and built a steady following of customers and clients. In addition to providing a unique and curated shopping experience to shoppers of all shapes, gender, and sizes, Cowprint also offers editorial styling services and creative direction.
Cowprint collaborated most recently with mĀK Collective, a D.C.-based art collective promoting creativity, accountability, and community for and by Black creative youths. Cowprint styled mĀK Collective’s most recent project, “Negros With Gunz,” an Afro-Western shoot inspired by Robert F. Williams’ book of the same title.
[「OPPO Find X3 Pro」、10億色のディスプレイとカメラに込められた想いとは] impress.co.jp - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from impress.co.jp Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Kodak Aerochrome III Infrared Film 1443 was discontinued more than a decade ago, and it now changes hands on eBay for more than $100 for a single roll. If you were to head out with one of these few remaining canisters loaded into your camera, what would you shoot?
Jason Kummerfeldt of grainydays scooped up a handful of rolls of Aerochrome a few years ago and wandered the hills of northern California to produce some mind-bending colors and make the most of this unique film stock.
An initial version of Aerochrome was created in the 1940s as part of an attempt to give Air Force pilots an advantage when trying to spot enemies camouflaged among a canopy of trees. The theory was that lacking chloroplast, the uniforms of enemy troops would stand out among the vegetation, which itself is converted by the film to vibrant pink. In the 1960s, Kodak released a consumer version that was in production until its demise in 2010.