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40 Amazing Online Photography Magazines

40 Amazing Online Photography Magazines
Whatever country we live in, we’re probably all familiar with the well-known photography magazines available in our newsagents and bookstores. The UK has Practical Photography, France has Photo, the Italians have Zoom and the Americans have American Photo. What you may not know is that there are many more photography magazines that are only available online. That’s the great thing about online publishing. Further Reading on SmashingMag: Link As an introduction to the wonderful world of online photography magazines, we put together a list of the biggest and best that we could find. Amazing Online Photography Magazines Link The 37th Frame5 Dedicated to bringing the best photojournalism on the internet to its readers. Positive Magazine7 It’s in Italian, but the photos are amazing. The Big Picture9 News stories in photographs. ePHOTOzine11 The UK’s largest and friendliest online photography magazine. Lunatic17 Creative contemporary photojournalism. Last Click Link Resources Link

The Zeugma: Critical Reviews: Sebastião Salgado The photographs of Sebastião Salgado arouse strong passions. Whenever his work comes under discussion in the bars and clubs where photojournalists are prone to meet, opinions fall either of two ways with no gradations between: outright adulation or downright suspicion about his methods and motivations. Ultimately, one's own assessment can only be made after seeing both the book and the exhibition, both titled Workers: An Archaeology Of The Industrial Age, rather than the carefully chosen selections published in many popular magazines as a foretaste of the larger project now on show. The issues underlying the problem with Salgado's work go way beyond just this one project by this one photographer; they are the worm in the heart of photojournalism as it is practised today, and it's the vicissitudes of history that hatched the egg of that worm. Until its ship began to founder on the reef of hard times, photojournalism had shown a laudable ability to constantly evolve. The critic A.D.

burn magazine Terrifying Beauty of Urban Decay Beauty can be found absolutely anywhere, and photographers have a talent for finding it in even the most unlikely places. You can discover this for yourself in the following photo collection showing how even urban decay has its artistic side. Photo by luketelliott Photo by ZeroOne Photo by AMERICANVIRUS Photo by Daniel Y. Photo by joshfassbind.com Photo by Renato @ Mainland China Photo by designwallah Photo by Aneurysm9 Photo by insouciance Photo by Daniel Y. Photo by Dean McCoy Photography Photo by thechannelc Photo by Danielle Bauer Photo by snoozeboy Photo by Aneurysm9 Photo by luketelliott Photo by mkhalili Photo by tj.blackwell Photo by sebastien.b Photo by radiospike photography Photo by liber Photo by Aneurysm9 Photo by liber Photo by kainet Photo by Jasmin Cormier Photo by Andrew Stawarz Photo by Ian Hampton Photo by Scallop Holden Photo by Calc-tufa Photo by Victor F Photo by Sugeo Photo by Zero1o1 Photo by Bob Jagendorf Photo by fras1977 Photo by ktpupp Photo by orange tuesday Photo by Roche Photo

180 style art fashion design December 2012 Have Faith in Summer: Bri Johnson Chasing Black Crows: Hannah Mai Los Angeles Streets: Niccolò Chimenti Short and Wet: Quentin Caffier Man With a Plan: Brandon Haynes PSIHO!: Igor Lazic Décadence: Nicholas Hayward Lethal Combination: Mauro Lopes Bodily Fiction: Marcelo Carretto Montevideo: Kim Taylor November 2012 Already Spoken: Charles Grogg Bohemian: Amélie Gagné Firewood: Jessica Tremp Wild Flower: Michal Greg Interference Plaid: Robyn Thompson Paper Ghosts: Joanna Pallaris Adventures: Alexis Mire Summer Crosley Re:Versed: Nica Junker Swim to Fashion: Louis Lander Deacon Train sEt St. Jacobs: Kim Taylor October 2012 The Toys Factory: Manfredi Gioacchini It's Personal: Jocelyn Allen Life and Light: Guenter Knop Live Inside This: Eric Antoine Home Chemistry: Bart Hess Flash/Life: Giangiacomo Pepe New Parts: Laura Durán Durán Sabine: Brian Hart Reckless Unbound: Christy Lee Rogers Maille Call: Herman Miller Lingering: Kim Taylor Lukasz

People taking naps with stuff (big photo gallery) A worker takes a nap surrounded by ducklings at a duck farm on the outskirts of Jiaxing, Zhejiang province, China. What could be more satisfying than a nap? A nice nap taken while surrounded by piles of stuff. More photos of people taking naps while surrounded by stuff, below. (PHOTOS: REUTERS) A rebel fighter in Libya sleeps next to a box of ammunition at a position in the outskirts of Zlitan, near Misrata. A worker sleeps on a pile of cement in front of closed shops in Lahore, Pakistan. North Korean workers nap on piles of fertilizer shipped from China on the banks of Yalu River near the North Korean town of Sinuiju. A boy, with his face covered with an empty onion sack to protect him from flies, takes a nap in an open air vegetable market in New Delhi. A worker sleeps on tangerines in a market in Siliguri, India. A vendor naps beside packages of cabbages at a food market in Suining, China. A vendor selling Chinese watermelons takes a nap at a wholesale market in Huaibei, China.

L E N S C R A T C H 11 Touching Street Photographs of Hands Roger Boon Adore Noir Magazine Architecture of Density - MICHAEL WOLF PHOTOGRAPHY all images copyright michael wolf F-Stop Magazine ~ An online photography magazine featuring contemporary photography from established and emerging photographers

Life in Cities - MICHAEL WOLF PHOTOGRAPHY BLUR MAGAZINE - Free PDF Photo Magazine

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