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• #6252
he so funny
the man is pointing the wrong direction -
• #6253
award winning photographer Seth Casteel
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• #6254
^ Splendid!!
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• #6255
Study of the Chuey House designed by Richard Neutra
1958
Julius Shulman -
• #6256
Actually he looks like that he's making the Third Reich salute.
or an umpire signalling a four
more interested in the cricket than the giraffes
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• #6257
Abelardo Morell
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• #6258
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• #6259
Abelardo Morell
love this guy! also the tent camera series. was just looking at his website a few days ago, go back to it a couple of times a year.
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• #6260
^^ hahaha, sweet!
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• #6261
..so this one is not really brilliant, technically, but there's something about it, "the mood", I don't know.
Would hang on my wall immediately -Sheshnag Camp, Kashmir, India
Sheshnag is the first night halt of the Amarnath Yatra. Thousands of Hindus undertake a pilgrimage to Amarnath, at a height of 3888mt, in honour of Lord Shiva. This picture was taken at dawn the next day, in freezing cold with shivering hands. The snow on the mountains is fresh from previous night's snowfall.
Some more proper travel photography from that guy here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/sandeepachetan/
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• #6262
^^ Feel incredibly pseudo-intelectual for thinking this, but I really like the resonance between the angular tents and the mountains, and the contrast between mostly dark foreground and mostly light background helps to make the mountains loom in over the tents
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• #6263
Waves crash against a lighthouse in Newhaven, where a 14-year-old boy was swept away to sea
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• #6264
Beautiful and gloomy, that's some big waves coming in
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• #6265
he'd fit right in at broadway market
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• #6268
the birds at the front left make this
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• #6270
Thor-Able's service structure rolls back to prepare for launch.
Taken some time between 1957-1959.USAF
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• #6271
That's fucking ace
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• #6272
'Merica.
But great photo, seriously.
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• #6273
Timing was critical to catch this image of November 3rd's solar eclipse. But flying at 44,000 feet, intrepid eclipse chasers on a chartered jet traveling 500 miles per hour managed to intercept the the Moon's shadow. The remarkable flight made a perpendicular crossing of the central shadow track. Darkening the skies beyond the wing tip at that moment, the Moon's shadow was moving at some 8,000 miles per hour across the Atlantic Ocean, 600 miles southeast of Bermuda. After only an instant of totality, this snapshot captured the lunar disk in silhouette. Rays of sunlight shining past peaks and valleys along the lunar limb created the fleeting appearance of a glistening diamond ring.
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• #6274
(click image for big size)
*Our newest image, shot at the Seneca Sporting Range in Queens.
It’s been in the works for a long time and we’re so proud of this one, and how it came to life.
Behind the scenes video
showing the making of this image from start to finish.Broncolor lighting provided by: Fotocare
Video mic & light rig provided by: Du-All Camera
IQ 280 Digital back provided by: Digital Transitions -
• #6275
kinda spoilt it that they potatochopped the pint of guinness.
Apparently most of his are; he even considers himself a photo-humourist.