Wednesday, 26 March 2014

Stunning Visuals of Isolated Arctic Locations


Images shot by Brit artist Reuben Wu who is based in London give us some gritty images of abject desolation as he shares some surreal landscapes. An avid solitary traveler and extremely passionate for his photography, Wu is also an accomplished musician, being a producer as well as DJ, keyboardist, songwriter and violinist. Wu is also a graduate of industrial design. A man of certainly many talents and skills, his latest series of photographs called Ultima Esperanza, shows some stunning visuals of isolated arctic locations.
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Laughing Animals in pictures


Monkey business - a crested macaque appears to smile while approaching the camera, in Tangkoko National Park, Sulawesi, Indonesi. Photograph: Anup Shah/Rex


Tiger tiger, gurning bright. An Amur tiger grins like a Cheshire, or Lancashire, cat at Blackpool Zoo. Photograph: Blackpool Zoo/Rex


 Aping around: three native Sunda Isles Orangutans see the funny side, in Borneo, Indonesia. Photograph: Corbis
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Wednesday, 19 March 2014

Winners of the 2014 Sony World Photography Awards,


1.Winner, Hong Kong, National Awards: In July each year, a heart-pounding scene of wildebeest migration repeats itself in Kenya.(© Chi Hung Cheung, 2014 Sony World Photography Awards)

2.Second Place, Hong Kong, National Awards: Fire Dragon festival in Macau.(© © Chi Hung Cheung, 2014 Sony World Photography Awards)

3.Winner, Peru, National Awards: A man sells balloons in a cemetery in the capital Lima, Peru.(© © Milko Torres Ramirez, 2014 Sony World Photography Awards)


4.Second Place, China, National Awards: Horse fighting in Rongshui, Guangxi, China.(© © Ngai-bun Wong, 2014 Sony World Photography Awards)
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How to Tell Stories in your Adventure Photography with Krystle Wright


Krystle Wright  has documented her expeditions a little differently from some of her fellow adventure photographers. Using her breadth of knowledge of photojournalism from her Agence France-Presse and Sunday Telegraph newspaper days, Krystle’s images weave together, depicting the full experience of what it’s like to be exploring different lands, from Pakistan to Antarctica. Here, we talk with Krystle about how she edits down her images for an essay, what kind of gear she takes with her on a journey, and how keeping close tabs on World Press Photo, POYi, NPPA winners helped shape her critical eye.
 Photo by Krystle Wright
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Saturday, 15 March 2014

Extraordinary Gorilla Photography


Simon                                                                                                  
                                                                    


Mike Seamons





Toby Lockerbie




Satoshi Inoue



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Ten of the world's best city hikes


Tijuca Forest, Rio de Janeiro


Welcome to the jungle. Brazil’s first national park, the world’s largest urban forest, smack bang in the heart of Rio de Janeiro. Reclaimed and replanted as Atlantic rainforest in the latter half of the 19th century, the forest is a green smear of waterfalls, tall trees and rugged peaks. Winding through it all is a series of hiking trails. The sharply pointed Tijuca Peak (1022m/3353ft) is the highest mountain in the park, with a trail leading to a final ascent on stone steps aided by an iron chain. Or for something truly Rio, hike to the summit of Corcovado – inside the park – and its iconic Christ the Redeemer statue.

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Friday, 14 March 2014

Catholic survivors of Super Typhoon Haiyan revisited


The survivors of Super Typhoon Haiyan marching in a religious procession with icons and crucifixes in Tolosa on the eastern Philippine island of Leyte one week after the Super Typhoon devastated the area in November 2013



 The women from Lopez's original photograph are reunited: (left to right) Virginia Piedad, Elsie Indic, Ma. Catalina Consuelo, and Maricel Martinez, on road where they marched last November. Photograph: Ted Aljibe/AFP/Getty Images

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Thursday, 13 March 2014

Awesome Big Bee Faces


Photo credit: Sam Droege/USGS

The USGS Bee Inventory and Monitoring Lab has posted hundreds of incredible high resolution macro photos of bees and other insects to Flickr. The images, taken by Sam Droege, are part of the lab’s mission to survey America’s native bee species. Here are five very interesting bee faces


 Photo credit: Sam Droege/USGS


 Photo credit: Sam Droege/USGS

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6 Mysterious Airplane Disappearances in Aviation History


 Air France Flight 447: An Airbus A330 flight from Rio de Janeiro to Paris plunged into the Atlantic Ocean in 2009, killing all 228 passengers and crew on board. But it took a full five days for search and rescue teams to find the wreck and another three years for investigators to report that ice crystals had caused the autopilot to disconnect. The bodies of 74 passengers remain unrecovered.


 Amelia Earhart: One of the most storied and enduring legends of aviation history, ace pilot Amelia Earhart disappeared in her twin-engine monoplane Electra over the Pacific Ocean in 1937 in an attempt to circumnavigate the globe. No trace of her plane was ever found even after a multi-million dollar search effort, and Earhart was officially declared dead in 1939.

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Scientists Track a Great White Shark Across the Atlantic for the First Time


Scientists get ready to attach a tracking tag to a great white shark nicknamed Lydia.
PHOTOGRAPH BY ROBERT SNOW, OCEARCH
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Tuesday, 11 March 2014

Canada's wild side: the Great Bear Rainforest



Lonely Planet has produced this article for Nikon. All editorial views are those of Lonely Planet alone and reflect our policy of editorial independence and impartiality. Video content supplied by the BBC.

For wildlife spotters, it's the score of a lifetime: a creamy white kermode bear roaming its home in the Great Bear Rainforest in British Columbia. Not a polar bear, but an offshoot of the black bear, there are only about 400 kermodes (which can stand up to six feet tall) in the wild; and only one in 10 have the gene which gives them a coat the color of frothy cappuccino foam.

Kermode bears are but one of dozens of wildlife species found in this vast coastal forest in BC. One of the last remaining places like it on Earth, the Great Bear Rainforest is a wild and remote region of islands, fjords and towering peaks, stretching south from Alaska along the BC coast, past Haida Gwaii to roughly Campbell River on Vancouver Island (which isn't part of the forest). Covering 32,000 sq km, this is the last major tract of coastal temperate rainforest left anywhere.
 
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Stunning Images Of The Dinka People Of Southern Sudan And Their Way Of Life




Photographers Carol Beckwith and Angela Fisher have come up with a stunning series featuring the people and lifestyle of the Dinka tribe in the South of Sudan. 

Because herding cattle is a way of life, the milestones of the people of the Dinka tribe are very closely tied with their oxen. For example, young Dinka men are given an ox when they come of age, and the name of the ox becomes part of their identity. 

The series was inspired by their awareness that “traditional cultures are fast disappearing”, and they wanted to preserve the “sacred tribal ceremonies and African cultural traditions all too vulnerable to the trends of modernity.” 



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Sport picture of the day: White space


Four-time Iditarod winner Jeff King traverses the stunning Alaskan landscape during the 77-mile last leg of the 2014 race. Race-leader King ultimately had to pull out after ferocious winds made it difficult to navigate the trail and the severe gusts blew him and his dog team into driftwood. Although he was eventually able to untangle the team he could not get them moving again and the race was won by Dallas Seavey with Aliy Zirkle in second place
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Monday, 10 March 2014

The sea lashes against the harbour in Warrenpoint, Co Down



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The sea crashes into the coast in Stonehaven, Aberdeenshire with high winds and rain washing away



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Two cyclists wrapped up in their thermals ride


Two cyclists wrapped up in their thermals ride along the foggy and frozen Richmond Park in south-west London


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Two male desert giraffes prepare to fight


Two male desert giraffes prepare to fight in the Hoanib sand river, Namibia


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Two swans look graceful as they glide past the stunning autumn leaves in Sheffield Park Gardens




    Two swans look graceful as they glide past the stunning autumn leaves in Sheffield Park Gardens
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Saturday, 8 March 2014

72 HOURS IN ISTANBUL


PHOTO BY Damien Roué, cbn Some rights reserved

November 2011. Sky is low and a cold wind is blowing through the streets of Istanbul. Straddling both Europe and Asia, Turkey's capital is in a unique situation, torn between history and modernity. This makes it the perfect place for an extended weekend. Visit Hagia Sophia mosque, get lost at the Grand Bazaar, ferry around the Bosphorus and explore the old and new city on foot to get the most of your weekend.


 FERRIES
Istanbul's local public transportation system is a complex network of trams, funiculars, metro lines, buses, bus rapid transit, and ferries.
PHOTO BY Damien Roué, All rights reserved

SPICE BAZAAR
The Spice Bazaar is one of the largest bazaars in the city. Located in Fatih, in the neighborhood of Eminönü, it is the second largest covered shopping complex after the Grand Bazaar.
PHOTO BY Damien Roué, All rights reserved

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Dazzling View of the Northern Lights Dancing Over a Partially Frozen River


 Shot on a most unusual night in Norway, a dazzling view of the northern lights dancing over a partially frozen river creates the most delightful reflections. These spectacular images were captured by Arild Heitmann, a 33-year-old landscape photographer from Northern Norway.


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Friday, 7 March 2014

Stunning Landscape and Human Interest Photos from Around the World



Thailand-based photographer Weerapong Chaipuck captures stunning landscape and human interest photos from around the world while on his travels after leaving early from a profession in the field of medicine. Among those images are of Asia, an exotic, beautiful and enigmatic continent replete with breathtaking landscapes and awash with multihued cultures and traditions. These qualities are precisely what photographer Chaipuck is able to depict in his images. Viewing his work, it is difficult to believe that he got into photography as a second career, after opting for an retirement from the medical profession.

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Queen of the Night Glitz, glamour and dance at the relaunch of NYC's historic Diamond Horseshoe Club




75 years after its initial opening, the Paramount Hotel's former vaudeville theater, the Diamond Horseshoe Club, opened its doors once more on 31 December 2013. There—with magic, majesty, surprise and splendor—"Queen of The Night," an immersive theatrical experience, takes dinner-theater to staggering new heights. The production has been dreamed up by the team behind Sleep No More and, although they feel somewhat akin, "Queen of the Night" aligns more with story-driven dance and cirque—while adding dinner to the mix. Every detail, from Thom Browne's costumes to Jennifer Rubell's food experience and the meticulously ornate staging, lend to wonder and an escape from the ordinary. It's one-of-a-kind and with a scheduled limited run, it's worth exploring now.


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Chinese couple pose in GAS MASKS amid choking smog on their wedding



It has grounded planes, closed roads and even been compared to a nuclear winter, but one couple were not going to let the smog in Beijing ruin their big day.
In an apparent protest against the heavy pollution, the couple added gas masks to their more traditional wedding outfits before posing for a series of shots around Guomao Bridge in the Chinese capital.
Severe pollution has hit much of northern China for the past week, with some readings well over 10 times the internationally accepted safety limit.




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Wednesday, 5 March 2014

Interview with Artistic Neon Portrait Photographer, Hid Saib


Light effects are just about as versatile as the imagination. The possibilities are endless. This is what Brazilian photographer Hid Saib discovered as he played around with some neon effects on people’s faces. Hid Saib used tiny flecks of vivid neon paint and decorated the faces as well as shoulders of the subjects in his portraits.


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