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With the recent release of Lomography's first ever 110 black and white film, we know you must be itching to try them out with some notable 110 cameras. We come to your rescue with a mini-series which features some of these classic compact shooters!
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From a young age, we would pass Pitstone Windmill all the time as it was just down the road. But only since I got into lomography have I seen it as a fantastic place to take dynamic photographs. It’s somewhere you can go back to again and again and see it in different lights and seasons, it never gets old. It's somewhere to escape the city and relax in the countryside!
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Thank you for submitting your amazing pictures for the Lomography India: Represent Rumble. And now it's time to release the names of the winners!
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Photojournalism at its best. This is the 37-year legacy LIFE Magazine has left us. It's creator, Henry Luce, founder of the other boldly titled magazine, TIME, had a vision that the editorial proved to have achieved. This vision? As stated in his profound mission statement: "To see life...to see the world; to eyewitness great events...to see strange things...the see and be amazed".
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Most all of us can recall, from memory, The Beatles' iconic 'Abbey Road' album cover. Stories, such as the urban legend of Paul being dead, have been spun from the cover depicting The Fab Four crossing the zebra crossing in the London borough where Abbey Road Studios is located. Though, what you may never have crossed paths with yet are these outtakes!
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It's not a question of putting a face to a name but of putting a face to a photo. In 'Behind Photographs', a series by commercial and editorial photographer Tim Mantoani, the photogs behind some of our age's most iconic photographs are the subject, each exposing the individual responsible for images that have, since their publication, been burned into our memory.
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As analogue lovers, there's no telling in how much we adore film photographs. Seeing one's shots on actual prints and compiled in a book brings visual elation and self-gratification. Photos on Pages is a series which features photo-books by great photographers. In this third volume, the spotlight is on the phenomenal punk rock band, the Ramones, and their apocalyptic film shots by various rock photographers.
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On my first trip to New York City this July, on a super hot sunny day, I did the right-of-passage walk across the Brooklyn Bridge. It has always been known to be a photographic mecca, so one camera just wasn't enough.
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It's all-out fashion week here on Lomography's Magazine! Today, let us all twist and shout as Twiggy, "The Face of '66," blows us away with her eternally voguish looks and style.
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The statuesque Eiffel Tower is undeniably one of France's greatest gifts to the world. If you've ever been curious about the pride of Paris, here are some photos to tell you the story behind its construction!
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Behind the scenes of The Seven Year Itch, George Zimbel, among a number of other photographers, captured this flowering still of Marilyn Monroe: while her skirt flew up and the crowd roared like crazy!
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Surrealism and photography, when combined, is compelling and marvelous. May Ray was one of the pioneers of this state-of-the-art style and this violin-like photograph of a woman was his most famous work.
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Dorothea Lange's photograph, entitled Migrant Mother, expressed deep emotional impact. The creases on the mother's face showed despair and longing. Her desperate eyes yielded a flicker of hope. Her children were the pillars of her strength. She was a woman who battled depression.
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This photograph is literally out of this world. We, worldlings, will surely remember it – to infinity and beyond!
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What makes a Hollywood icon legendary? His leading roles? Absolutely, yes. His photographs? Definitely, yes – especially if its composition and mood is as utterly perfect as this James Dean portrait.
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To be photographed as husband and wife with such profundity, like this bold and infamous portrait of John and Yoko, certainly immortalizes relationships. It is strong and stunning – like their adoration for each other.
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Some photographs are destined to be ruined and forgotten. Some photographs are destined to be remembered and cherished – such as this infamous portrait which almost did not make it.
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His eyes did not gaze into the photographer’s eyes but his statuesque expression extraordinarily shows authority and tension. This portrait of a man with a beret is like the male Mona Lisa in black and white film – enigmatic in every way.
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Look at this photograph and you will think twice if it is just a hoax. Look at this photograph and your insides will whirl. Look at this photograph and you will say, "Whoa!"
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It’s like a still from a guerilla movie, but no, this photograph of a man slaying another man is authentic. Bold and brutal. Cold and condescending. War, even only seen in photographs, is indeed inhuman.