cubiclecafe:
Coffee+MilwaukeeART
npr:
This is cool. — Tanya
inothernews:
WHOA-LGERS Milwaukee-based photographer Jack Long uses high-speed photography to capture the moment splashes are made in cups of coffee. He won’t reveal exactly how his technique works, except to say that the technique employs “short-duration flash lighting.” And perhaps not using decaf. (Photo: Jack Long / Rex Features via the Telegraph)
Various independent acts of motion. (photographed synchronously from three points of view)
From Eadweard Muybridge’s The Human Figure in Motion
The Floating Foundation of Photography
The Foundation was founded by photographer Maggie Sherwood in 1970 after she bought an old houseboat, painted it purple and offered it as a gallery and photo center for many of her friends. Within a few years she added a classroom and darkrooms. The houseboat was originally moored at the 79th Street Boat Basin, but in later years it traveled up and down the Hudson River. Photography critic A. D. Coleman described it as “moored at the literal edge of Manahattan, marginal by definition, it served a key role as the medium of photography itself moved from the periphery to the center of cultural discourse and creative activity.” The Foundation continued to be an influential center for photography in New York until two years after Sherwood’s death in 1984.
Photo via Freebird Books’ For-Gotham Quiz.
New gig for the eyes behind the Boston Globe’s “The Big Picture.”
The Atlantic:
Introducing In Focus, our new photo blog by Alan Taylor. Check out these incredible images from the revolution on the Nile, or follow on Twitter and Facebook for Alan’s latest photo essays.
yesterdayifeltlikegod:
seward cafe, minneapolis