
Jeffrey Silverthorne, Woman who died in her sleep, 1972
What if men were photographed the way women typically were?
Mimicking the Masters: Irving Penn
American photographer Irving Penn was known for taking fashion photographs, still life, and portraits. He also worked for Vogue Magazine where he contributed glamour shots. To this day, he is still considered one of the best when it comes to fashion photography.
Two brown hares (Lepus europaeus) boxing, and a third looking on, Hertfordshire. Picture: Mark Hamblin/2020VISION / Rex Features
(via imgTumble)
(via letsfuckinmybed)
Hubert Marot is a photographer with a magnificent eye for texture. His images focus on the unique patinas of organic and inert subjects, from sharp depictions of hair follicles to enormous, scarred rock faces. Rendered in monochrome and arranged side by side in a slideshow, it becomes surprisingly difficult to discern between concrete and skin, particularly in his uncomfortably fleshy depiction of a skate bowl.
(via fleurishes)
Lomography Tag of the Day - b&w
I’ve never bled like this before from injuries. Sad Yan is sad.
Anais Pouliot - Exhibition #2 photographed by Daniel Jackson, 2012
(via first-breath-after-coma)
Lomography Film of the Day - Lomography Redscale XR 50-200
High-Speed Photos of Balloons Popping by James Huse.
They look like cotton candy or some microbes you don’t want anywhere near you. (I’m a bit touchy on that issue having just watched Contagion over the weekend.)
via Fubiz and photojojo
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