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Sometimes, the best way to capture what’s really interesting and important at an event that’s exploding with color is to shoot it in black and white.
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A hundred goodie bags to be given away at an event opening is a good way to draw in the crowd. But that’s not the reason why I went to the inaugural of Culture We Love: Korean Festival 2012.
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Think you got nothing to shoot? Try looking at your own neighborhood again. You’ll be surprised at what you can find if you looked hard enough.
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Dutch filmmaker Frans Hofmeester has committed to shooting weekly clips of his kids since their birth. His son Vince is now 9 and his daughter Lotte recently turned 12. All the shots have been put together in these sweet time-lapse videos that make us think about how quickly time flies!
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Taking pics of children demands a sense of timing. This is nothing without speed and my La Sardina has this in spades.
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The La Sardina was a camera I ended up buying the same day it came out last year. The version I brought was the lovely bright red El Capitan. I thought I would give you an insight into all the places I visited whilst shooting the first roll through it. Read on to find out more.
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Who would have expected to find a K9 Park on the rooftop of a shopping center? I didn’t. I was just exploring one of the newest shopping centers in Singapore when I discovered this rather unique feature.
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Singapore’s iconic waterfront, Marina Bay, is often used as a site for events and exhibitions so when Asia’s second open air light art festival was held at Marina Bay and was open to the public, I popped by for a look.
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Recently I sent two rolls of film away for development, I had come across these in a lot of vintage cameras bought from a car-boot sale. Found film can be a hit or a miss sometimes, but luckily this roll was salvaged.
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I saw this some weeks ago while I was walking around in a shopping centre in Portugal and it made me smile!
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From humanizing comic book superheros, to beautifying trash piles, Australian street artist Fintan Magee has done it all. A chameleon, when it comes to themes and chosen surfaces to paint on, Magee often mixes different themes together to make pedestrians contemplate the individual issues separately as well as, as a whole.
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When my oldest daughter decided to help me develop some film, things didn't go quite as we planned.
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These photos date all the way back to the 1860s. These finds are from the McCord Museum, and are both fascinating historical documents of society as well as being articles of amusement, with funny expressions on the children, backdrops, and the toys being posed with!
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This series of provoking photographs aims to draw to attention the issue at hand: smoking. Belgian photographer Frieke Janssens calls into question the health risks that come with smoking, as well as cultural views on the habit, through having kids pose as models in glamor ads of the Jazz era.
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Check out 'The obliteration room 2011' by Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama. It isn't morbid, but quite the opposite! It's a larger, reworking, of a previous children's project by the same artist. The new piece is part of a major solo exhibition, ‘Look Now, See Forever’. It'll wow the spots right off of you, that is if you were a multicolored ladybug...
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Every kid is waiting for Christmas. The children in my arts and crafts club aren't any exception. This year the week before Christmas was extremely busy. My 5-6 year-old artists were super excited about making Christmas gifts and decorations. Handmade with love. It can't get more analogue than this.
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Playing with light is a great opportunity for Lomo-Lovers to fill up your cameras with a super-fast films and capture wonderful, weird effects and bokeh this (New Zealand) Summer Holiday!
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Every year, parents bring their little ones to see Santa Claus. This has been a running tradition for many years now. Learn more about this tradition and view some photos of children with Santa Claus after the break.
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One of the best things Paris can offer. Oh, those gardens! I keep on coming back. The pure beauty of Paris. Place de la Concorde, Tuileries Garden and then the Pyramids of Louvre - nothing can beat this experience! Created by Catherine de Medicis as the garden of the Tuileries Palace in 1564, it was first opened to the public in 1667, and became a public park after the French Revolution.
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Why are balloons so enchanting? Well, they are associated with happy children who see the balloon as more than the material and air they are made of. This whole picture is enchanting, not just the standalone, or more so float-alone, balloon! Here are some balloon and children images, from different periods!