AMERICAN PHOTOGRAPHIC ARTISTS Wednesday October 5, 2022
Interested in entering the NFT space? You may want to watch a high-level overview aimed at the professional commercial photographer focusing on the steps you should take before diving in. American Photographic Artists recently brought together a number of artists, legal experts and marketing insiders to discuss non-fungible tokens, in conversation with APA National Executive Director Juliette Wolf-Robin. You can watch in at YouTube by hitting this story's link.
Read the full Story >>
SPONSOR CONTENT FROM AP OPEN
By
David Schonauer Wednesday October 5, 2022
The time has come. The judging is over. Today we announce the 10 finalists of the American Photography Open 2022 competition. Congratulations to Mauro De Bettio; Diana Feil; Deb Fong; Jatenipat
Ketpradit; Aviva Klein; Sabina Miklowitz; Swee Oh; Khahn Phan; Alain Schroeder; and Svetlin Yosifov. This year, as in our past competitions, we received thousands of entries from around the world,
from photographers at … Read the full Story >>
Fstoppers Tuesday October 4, 2022
It’s one thing to plan a restaurant shoot or a client brief for a particular project, but how do you go about planning and photographing a much longer project, like a cookbook? Fstoppers has a tutorial on how to self-publish a cookbook. Tip 1: Get clean on your aesthetic. “When you’ve picked your cookbook topic, it might already be really clear to you what kind of look and feel you want to create with your book. If you’re not so sure, start collecting visual inspiration from Pinterest, magazines, or other cookbooks,” advises product and food photographer Helena Murphy.
Read the full Story >>
Aperture Tuesday October 4, 2022
With the overturning of Roe v. Wade by the Supreme Court this summer, writer and curator Lou Stoppard turns his attention to the “weaponizing” of photography in the campaign against abortion. Writing at Aperture, Stoppard notes that by 2013, eight states had passed laws requiring abortion providers to suggest a viewing of images from a mandated ultrasound. “The push for such requirements shows society’s steadfast belief in images to awaken, to chastise, to shame, to convince,” he writes.
Read the full Story >>