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David Schonauer

Call for Applications: The 2022 Indigenous Photograph Grant

Indigenous Photograph Grant   Thursday July 14, 2022

Supported by Photoville and Leica, the $5,000 Indigenous Photograph grant is available to an Indigenous photographer looking to begin or continue an existing photographic project, with an emphasis on photographers working in a documentary or storytelling capacity. Applicants need not be existing members of Indigenous Photograph to apply, but non-member applicants will are required to submit an application to join the platform, a global database of indigenous photographers available to photo editors and other creatives.   Read the full Story >>

Trending: All Amped Up, This Photographer Tried to Develop Film with Energy Drinks

By David Schonauer   Thursday July 14, 2022

A few years ago, PPD spotlighted photographer Stephen Gill's project "Best Before End," which had websites and magazines amped up in part because Gill used a variety of popular energy drinks to process his film negatives. (The images were also beautiful in a psychedelic way.) More recently, a photographer and YouTuber has been getting attention for attempting to develop 35mm black-and-white film using powdered …   Read the full Story >>

Insight: Using a Drone for Real Estate Photography

Billy Kyle   Wednesday July 13, 2022

Adding aerial photography to their offerings will help real estate photographers diversify the images they’re able to deliver and help them increase their business’s bottom lines. So notes YouTuber Billy Kyle, who offers a “complete guide” to using drones for photographing real estate. For beachfront properties and homes that sit on a large piece of land, drones are a must, he notes.   Read the full Story >>

Spotlight: Weightless Bodies Frozen in Motion

MY MODERN MET   Wednesday July 13, 2022

Canada-based artist Barbara Cole specializes in capturing people (and other objects)  submerged in crystal-clear pools. Her latest series, “BEAT,” uses water as a way to celebrate the movement of the human figure, notes My Modern Met. Each image in the series features a solitary man or woman dressed in white and frozen in a state of action. “The water imbues their limbs with a sense of weightlessness, which in turn makes their movements appear effortless and ethereal,” adds MMM.   Read the full Story >>

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