l'éclairage de la géométrie.
Swedish photographer and graphic designer Marcus Wallinder distills elements of his local scandinavian architecture into its most simple form #photography#silentsunday
This morning's moon setting to the west. Kind of a tough shot since the moon-sky contrast was steadily decreasing as the day arrived. Canon R5, 700mm, f16, 1/1000 sec, ISO 400, lightly cropped. #photography#moon
Recently I was convinced I needed to move out of the city. It was too hectic, too dense. But I recently removed a work project that didn't align with me anymore and I feel more like myself than in a long time. Then my visit to Rome invigorated me. I feel lighter, less dense, less hectic. Now I perceive more of the beautiful absurdities the big cities have to offer, the liveliness, the whole spectrum of what makes us complete awesome, neurotic and chaotic humans.
There are some architectural details I find endlessly fascinating. Windows and doors fall into that category, but so do staircases and corridors.
This staircase can be found at the Tate St Ives, and is pretty much a black and white affair even when you see it in full colour.
kodak pixpro #photography of 2 ski ball machines (side by side) with rings of 5000 4000 3000 2 in red purple fuchsia and white (with a yellow 10000 in the corner)
We’re thrilled to share that this image by Jordan Vonderhaar, from his photo essay “Braving ‘La Bestia’” in our July/August 2023 print issue, was named one of the top 100 photos of the year by TIME magazine. (1/2)
Yesterday, we went to Takasaki, the largest city in Gunma Prefecture. Here is a set of unprocessed, out-of-camera photos from our second stop, the Takasaki Byakue Daikannon. This Kannon statue was built in 1936, and is 41.8m tall.
Souvenir shops along the approach road
Peek-a-boo
Up close
Profiles of the statue and of its builder, Yasusaburo Inoue.