Link Roundup: Half & Half Edition

Three great photographers, three great articles. Simplicity itself:


  • William Hundley’s Photography - I totally don’t know the name of this, but William likes to hide people. He takes photos of people jumping behind sheets, coats, and other obstructions. He freezes the action, making the person disappear but leaving behind a mysterious sheet. I can’t explain why I like these so much, but I do. They make me giggle. Added bonus, I found his Flickr account!
  • Justin Quinnell’s In-Mouth Pinhole Photography - Justin takes extraordinarily surreal pinhole photographs using a tiny camera mounted inside his mouth. You really need to see these; talk about getting a unique angle for your photos.
  • Uncredited Photos of One Man’s Struggle - One man and his family deal with the pain of a man’s heroin addiction and ongoing fight with aids. If you know the name of the photographer who took these, please tell me. They are powerful photos and I haven’t been able to find out the name of the person behind the camera yet.
  • Convert an old Mouse Into a Shutter Release Cable - The inventiveness of the DIY crowd will never cease to amaze me. Simple instructions for making your own cable release; you do need to know a little bit about electronics before you get started though.
  • Using Your Scanner as a Camera - Haje Jan Kamps takes a brief break from the hectic life of a magazine editor to give his readers an article on a new way of taking photos. Use a scanner! Makes me wish I hadn’t sold my old one.
  • Why Bubble Levels Are a Waste of Money - I always have problems getting my horizons, or anything else, in my photos straight. After reading this article, I’m with the author. I don’t think a bubble level is going to help me that much, I’m better off using the three techniques he outlines.

I’m totally impressed with the response you guys gave on yesterday’s post. I’m looking forward to digging through those photos tonight this weekend.

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Reader Quiz: What’s Your Best September Photo?

What's Your Best September Photo?

Stages by Jeff Kubina

I’m prepping the next batch of Flickr testimonials for later on this week, but it’s not enough. I want more! Not just testimonials to write, but more photos to pore over and comment on.

I’ve spent some time on Explore, I’ve browsed through my contact photos, checked out other people’s favorites, and it’s fun! I’ve forgotten how much I enjoy commenting on and tagging other people’s photos.

So now that I’m revitalized and wired to check out what the internet has to show me, I’ve decided to start the flood of comments at home:

What’s the best photo you took last month?

I want you to comment on this entry with a link to your best photo from the month of September. You can explain why it’s the best or your favourite, I’m interested to hear it. I’ll keep accepting entries until next Tuesday, when I’ll post a bevy of beauteous links along with my own personal best September photo.

I’m hoping to see some photos of fall leaves, because I haven’t really taken any, but feel free to submit photos of anything you like. I’m looking forward to it!

Send me your photos!

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Site Updates

You guys gotta be getting sick of these updates by now, right? They’re practically daily.

Firstly, a very heartfelt thanks to everyone out there for weathering the post drought while I took some time off. Not having to worry about my online presence was a massive help and gave me some breathing room. I’m feeling much better now, more focused in a way.

Secondly, I am so back. Obviously, right? I’m testing the waters with a posting schedule of five days a week. This leaves my weekends free for panicking about articles for the coming week and wishing I was out taking photos.

Next week, I’ll have posts on taking photos of pumpkins for Hallowe’en as well as a large batch of Flickr testimonials.

I never know how to finish these posts.

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Diana Camera Returns, Preorders Now Available

Diana Camera Returns, Preorders Now Available

The legendary Diana camera is finally re-entering production after a 35 year absence. Unica Home is currently taking pre-orders for the popular toy cameras and hopes to start shipping them later this month.

I’m far from being old enough to properly get excited about the “return” of this, but I’m intrigued. I like what I’ve seen from the images shown so far, and I like the idea of using a previously rare camera instead of some $20 lomo I can buy at 7-11.

If you aren’t enough of a lomography nerd to know about the Diana or why I think it’s cool, that’s okay. I still like you, just not as much. Here’s a quick blurb from the product page:

Originally produced by the great wall plastic factory in Hong Kong in the 1960’s the Diana has become a cult classic, known for producing soft and dreamy images due to light leakage. Given away by Reader’s Digest as a freebie, the Diana has been out of production for almost 35 years.

A light, inexpensive medium (120 film) format camera, the ‘new’ Diana has 4 f-stops and comes with a booklet, camera strap and lens cover. An additional change is that the camera has a removable lens, allowing for pinhole camera action!

At $50, this sounds like a pretty awesome toy. I’m flat broke at the moment, due a number of other shiny toys recently purchased, but I will probably be picking one of these up sometime in the near future. I need to broaden my horizons beyond my DSLR and lomo cameras are a bit more affordable than professional medium format cameras.

Would you consider purchasing a Diana Camera? Why or why not?

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Nikon’s Small World Micro-Photography Contest Winners Announced

Nikon's Small World Micro-Photography Contest Winners Announced

Nikon has finally announced the 2007 winners of their ‘Small World’ micro-photography contest! My sincere congratulations go out to First Place winner Gloria Kwon of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Institute.

Her entry, seen left, is titled “Double transgenic mouse embryo, 18.5 days (17x).” The image details state that she used “Brightfield, Darkfield, Fluorescence (GFP and RFP)” microscopy techniques to create the image.

My two personal favourites actually wound up being the first and second place winners of the popular vote, but were deemed an ‘image of distinction’ and 14th place, respectively. The bright colours in Christian Gautier’s photo “Cedrus Atlantica (cedar) leaf crosscut (200x)” really jumped out at me; I gave it my vote for top honors and it came 14th overall, 2nd in popular vote.

Marc Van Hove took the top honor of the popular vote with his image “Crystalized solgel chemical (50x)” and earned the ‘image of distinction’ label as well. The oil-slick rainbows and light green parts that looked (to me) like plant cellular structure really drew my eyes.

Entries are already being accepted for the 2008 Small World competition. If you missed your chance in 2007, get a jump on next year’s contest and submit your microscopy photos now.

Related Posts:


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Link Roundup: Somewhat NSFW Edition

Don’t get too excited folks, I haven’t degenerated into passing out Playboy and Maxim spreads (yet). I just came across a couple links that I think are worth seeing, but may offend some of the more innocent members of my readership.

For those of you new to the internet, NSFW is shorthand for Not Safe for Work. This means that the link leads to something your boss might fire you for. It’s usually nudity, but it can be other things that the puritans consider vulgar.

Enough of that bollocks, on with the links:


  • “The Park” by Kohei Yoshiyuki (NSFW #1)- Japanese photographer Yoshiyuki explores the weird phenomenon of sex in pulic parks, and the peeping toms who spy on them in this series of photos from 1970’s Tokyo.
  • Shocking Anorexia Photo at Milan Fashion Week (NSFW #2) -I don’t know how ’shocking’ it is, but it takes a lot to scandalize me. However, it does a good job of getting the message out there about eating disorders. Much like this commercial, which has been doing the rounds.
  • How to Gracefully Accept Criticism (SFW #1) - ZenHabits hits the nail on the head with this article. This is must-read material for any photographer expecting to show another human their work. These rules are totally optional if you’re dealing with the Delete Me crowd on Flickr; I like to be snarky right back to them.
  • Twelve Essential Photographic Rules (SFW #1) - You can’t break ‘em if you don’t know ‘em, so head over to PopPhoto and take some notes.

Now I can start digging through the 150-odd photography articles that piled up in my RSS reader on my hiatus. Link roundups might be a bit heftier in the coming weeks.

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goldengod is the blog of Vancouver photographer Andrew Ferguson. Updates regularly cover digital photography tips, media, technology, advertising, and the latest activities of The Last Fridays.

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