Norther Lights Photographer of the Year Friday December 10, 2021
This year’s Northern Lights Photographer of the Year images may make you glow green with envy. Travel and photography blog Capture the Atlas has released photos from its 2021 competition, though there are no winners: Capture the Atlas selects 25 of the most awesome images of the Northern Lights in their publication from the year. Dan Zafra, editor of Capture the Atlas, says he looks for work by both famous and emerging photographers. By the way, the Northern Lights season for 2022 is just getting underway. Read the full Story >>
DIYPhotography Friday December 10, 2021
Kodak’s newly announced Kodak Reelz allows you to digitize 8mm and Super 8 film straight to 1080p high definition video with the push of a button, notes DIY Photography. It accepts 3-inch, 5-inch and 7-inch rolls of film onto a universal reel, and on-screen directions allow you to capture it using the mp4 codec straight to an SD card up to 128GB in capacity. No computer or software is needed, as everything is done internally in Reelz itself. It has a 5-inch display on the for navigation and for watching video while they’re being captured. Read the full Story >>
By
David Schonauer Friday December 10, 2021
It's not chic to stiff freelancers. In 2017, the French magazine L'Officiel announced the creation of an American edition, L'Officiel USA, promising coverage of high fashion, art and travel through an
international lens. But this week we learned that the City of New York has filed suit against the magazine for failing to pay freelancers on time, or at all. NYC filed the suit … Read the full Story >>
MY MODERN MET Thursday December 9, 2021
Andrew McCarthy is one of the stars of astrophotography, but his latest standout imagery features the Moon. During the recent lunar eclipse — the longest partial lunar eclipse in 500 years — McCarthy stayed up until 4 a.m. in order to shoot thousands of images,” which he then transformed into a stunning composite photo,” notes My Modern Met. “I was able to capture the entire sequence from start to finish,” says McCarthy, who also made news recently with a shot of the sun made from 150,000 separate photos. Read the full Story >>