Artificially Photographed

Art student studying photography in Philadelphia.

life:

Before and after: “In Miami, where he appeared with [comedian and singer] Joe E. Lewis for two weeks this year, Sinatra … tells his bodyguard, Ed Pucci, that he will clear the table by yanking the cloth off without disturbing the china.”

See more photos of Sinatra here.

firsttimeuser:

Castle Enshrouded by Mist, 1979
photo by Richard K. Hofmeister

firsttimeuser:

Castle Enshrouded by Mist, 1979

photo by Richard K. Hofmeister

photojojo:

Using the Image Blender app on his phone, Daniella Zalcman created double exposure images of New York and London. The idea for the project came to her when she moved from New York to London.

After a successful Kickstarter campaign, she’s now launched a book called NY + London.

New York and London Compared With Double Exposures

via The Photoblographer

p.s. Want more tips on phone apps and phoneography tips? Check out Photojojo University!

likeafieldmouse:

Alejandro Cartagena - The Car Poolers (2012)

“A bridge is situated on a highway that goes from the Mexican city of Nuevo Laredo — across the United States border in Laredo, Texas — due south to Monterrey. In the winter early-morning hours, Cartagena stood there, pointing his lens down at the passing cars, like a distracted spy.

He was peeking into the backs of the pickup trucks, where construction workers pile together on their way to earn an honest living. Car Poolers is an effort to peer inside these tiny worlds that straddle public and private.”

(via worldfallsdown)

(Source: thelightstudio, via paris2london)

arpeggia:

Irving Penn -  Two Guedras, Morocco, 1971 (top); Three Women of Rissani, Morocco, 1971 (bottom) | More posts

(via ivegotabike)

malformalady:

Dylan Menges snapped this haunting silhouette left behind when he moved the still-warm corpse of a roadkilled coyote: “She hadn’t been there long  and moving her carcass off the road revealed the salty silhouette from passing cars on a winter highway.”
Photo credit: ©2010 Dylan Menges

malformalady:

Dylan Menges snapped this haunting silhouette left behind when he moved the still-warm corpse of a roadkilled coyote: “She hadn’t been there long  and moving her carcass off the road revealed the salty silhouette from passing cars on a winter highway.”

Photo credit: ©2010 Dylan Menges

(via partylikesarah)