Register
David Schonauer

Trending: Repeat Photography Captures Climate Change

YALE CLIMATE CONNECTIONS   Monday February 14, 2022

“When you show a glacier that’s just not there anymore, it’s hard to dispute,” says Ron Karpilo says. “It’s disappearing … something is changing, and so that’s what’s made [photography] such a good tool.” Karpilo, notes Yale Climate Connections, is one of a growing number of amateur photographers practicing repeat photography—documenting modern landscapes from the exact perspective seen in historical images. In doing so, they are building treasury of images to show how climate change has affected areas all over the world, notes YCC.   Read the full Story >>

Books: Daniel Arnold's Humans

The New Yorker   Monday February 14, 2022

Photographer Daniel Arnold is eerily adept at capturing perfect moments in his pictures, although, notes The New Yorker, to Arnold perfection means locating beauty in what might otherwise be overlooked—the quotidian and the flawed, the discordant and the mottled. Like his forebears in the art of street photography, from Garry Winogrand to Joel Meyerowitz to Helen Levitt, Arnold trains his lens on people going about their lives in New York City. The work is collected in a new book called Pickpocket.   Read the full Story >>

Tech News: Capture One Live is a New Cloud-Based Collaboration Add-On

DP Review   Monday February 14, 2022

Capture One’s newly announced cloud-based collaboration tool, called Capture One Live, allows photographers to collaborate from anywhere in the world during a photoshoot in real-time or when editing images, notes DP Review. Team members or clients can remotely view, rate and tag images from any browser on any device. Capture One Live was first released as a beta last July. The new tool is ready for public use after months of further development and iteration. PetaPixel has more.   Read the full Story >>

Spotlight: Nature in Motion

By David Schonauer   Monday February 14, 2022

Insects in flight. Giant phantom jellyfish. The overlooked beauty of plankton. Those are the subjects of some of the projects we feature in today's roundup of motion work from around the web. All of them underscore a sense of how complex, chaotic, and wonderfully weird the world is-the world the lies all around us, yet never seen. Slow-motion techniques like those employed by Dr …   Read the full Story >>

Older Posts
Newer Posts
Pro Photo Daily All Access