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Who says scientists are too serious and uptight? Well, at least, the brilliant Albert Einstein knows how to have fun and enjoy his vacation!
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It all started with an idea; that this summer, my friends and I would take a road trip from San Francisco to Los Angeles. What was at first just a plan, quickly turned into a real adventure. This is the story of my endless, analogue summer with my two film-loving best friends.
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Malcolm Browne, the photographer behind the iconic photograph of a Buddhist monk performing self-immolation in Saigon in 1963, has passed on last August 28 at the age of 81. In his honor, let’s take a closer look at the story behind his iconic image. WARNING: Contains graphic images.
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With every new roll I put into my camera, I always try to do at least one levitation shot. For the past few months, after many trials and errors, I’ve picked up a few tips and tricks for taking jumping pictures so you guys can do it yourself!
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Superman, Wonder Woman, Spiderman, Batman, Darth Vader, Power Rangers, Hobbits, Elves, Zombies... YES that's COMIC CON in San Diego. It's the perfect time and place to lose your shyness when asking strangers for a picture.
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Being a part of the Lomography San Francisco team, I’m in the city almost all the time. I love going around places like the Embarcadero and the Mission for photo walks, but this time around, I wanted to show my fellow Lomographers what I call home in the town of Hercules, California.
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My city is a place that’s always in motion. So, in celebration of Go Skateboard Day, I shot a LomoKino movie while skating to show what my skateboard and I see whenever we (carefully) roll down the streets of San Francisco!
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Robert Frank is famous maybe for a publication he made in the 1950s, called The Americans (1958). He is a very important figure in American photography, and his pictures gave a fresh and skeptical outsider’s view of American society.
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For their first task, the US CitySlickers will show us around their towns and cities, documenting their experiences in analogue and telling us stories along the way. Let's meet Bryn and learn more about New York City!
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Here, I will explain my impressions of the LomoLab service from Lomography US. How it works, what you get for your money, and why or when I choose it over other photography laboratories.
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Until March 17th 2012, you can catch an exhibition of photographs by Juergen Teller at Lehmann Maupin Gallery in New York. If you’re in the city, make sure not to miss out.
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Just 45 years ago, marriage between two people of different races was illegal in America, this exhibition in New York, documents the marriage between two people, Richard and Mildred Loving, who helped change this law and America for good.
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Henry Wessel has been photographing the American West, particularly California, since the 1960s. Read on to find out about his unique take on things and how he managed to really captivate the essence of the US of A.
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The Tibor de Nagy Gallery in New York recently exhibited a selection of photo montages by New Jersey born John O’Reilly. Read on to find out more about how the artist's exquisite, sexually charged, dream-like collages also hark back to salient moments in the history of art.
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In case you can’t get yourself to an actual beach or pool this summer, why not head out to Robert Mann Gallery in NY and visit its At the Water's Edge exhibition? It includes both historical and contemporary images, so it will surely tickle your fancy one way or another.
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Once-classified images of atomic destruction at Hiroshima are on display in an exhibition titled Hiroshima: Ground Zero 1945 at the International Center of Photography (ICP), New York.
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Great Sand Dunes National Park is one of the most amazing places I have ever seen. The initial plan was to camp overnight, but unfortunately it is black bear country. Since I had lots of food in the trunk of my car, I chickened out and decided not to camp. Yet, I did visit the place for just a couple of hours which were more than enough to have an amazing time.
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Our first real adventure into the wild.