The fifth issue of Ahhhhh Mega-Zine is ready for your enjoyment. I really liked Javan Makhmali’s photos in this one.
Tag: photography
The last sunset of 2008
How to make a $10 macro photo studio light tent thing. I don’t really need one, but I could probably think of reasons after I make it.
GeorgiaBankRobbery.com features images of persons who may be involved in criminal activity or wanted for questioning.
I love this photo of Stravinsky.
The old man will be home as soon as he can, and we will take a walk. That’s poor folk’s luxury.
That’s a quote from Carleton Watkins, an early American landscape photographer who hauled thousands of pounds of equipment around the American West. His photos of the Yosemite area appeared in The Yosemite Book that helped make it a protected area, and had a big influence in creating national parks. He was great with the lens, but not so good with money. Sad story of failing health, failing eyesight, then insanity. He lost his life’s work when the San Francisco earthquake struck and his studio burned.
An interesting aside from photographer Michael David Murphy’s Against Ease: or How the Inifinitely Reproduceable Pushes Us Further From the Source:
In some ways, the pricing of digital fine art prints seems to be a shift-away from paying for an actual print to paying for all the expense that went into creating the work that led to this actual print, because making the actual print is relatively cheap. And thereÄôs something a lot less seductive in that, to me, as someone who might like to buy a print. I want to pay for the worth of the thing itself, not the artistÄôs overhead.
A street called Njar??agata

I’m still sorting through my photos from Iceland, sifting out the worthwhile from the not-so-great. I plan to take my time and upload them over the next week or so. This is from my first morning in Reykjavik. More to come.
A street called Njarðagata

I’m still sorting through my photos from Iceland, sifting out the worthwhile from the not-so-great. I plan to take my time and upload them over the next week or so. This is from my first morning in Reykjavik. More to come.
A fisherman at home
These photos of a leopard killing a crocodile are amazing. Apparently it’s the first time this has been witnessed or recorded.
I don’t remember how I came across these pictures of rare clouds, but they’re really cool.
Rob Giampietro started a collection of imagery from the New Yorker fiction pages, 48 so far. Lots of good stuff there.
Joshua Heineman has a cool little project going where he takes old photos and makes them wiggle* so they look 3D.
[*this is the preferred technical term]
Old photos from the Brooklyn Museum

The Brooklyn Museum has some great photos on Flickr. Currently in the commons are a great set of old lantern slides in Egypt, and a lot of images from the 1900 Paris Exposition.
In the Paris set, it’s cool how the primitive coloring job kind of flattens the images. They look almost like paper cut-outs or watercolor:
I’ve really been loving The Big Picture, the Boston Globe’s photojournalism blog.
Opolis is a comic made from photographs of paper cut-outs in a 3-dimensional office building. I’d have a hard time thinking of something more exhausting. Cool results, though. [via waxy]
Mine Rescuer
From the Library of Congress’ Flickr photostream.
ROTHKOesque, a group of photos with Mark Rothko-ish qualities.
The earliest known photo of Helen Keller, pictured in 1888 with Anne Sullivan. Things like this remind me that they were actually real people, not just nice little characters in a story.





