This Artist Painted Beautiful Scenes Of Oregon On Small Pebble Canvases

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The Oregonian Artist painted beautiful scenes of Oregon on small pebble canvases. Oregon is a beautiful state in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. Oregon has beautiful landscapes to attract people, and the “OregonianArtist” decided to capture the beauty of his homeland through art. He has been creating miniature paintings on pebbles for four years.

In his words “Well I didn’t really know so many people painted on rocks but I wanted to make a gift for someone one day, I thought it would be cool to paint something on a rock. It didn’t turn out well and I gave up. Then one day I was looking at a YouTube video where an artist was explaining a technique on canvas. I thought, “Hey! What if I try that on a rock?” I did and it turned out so much better than my first attempt. After that, I haven’t stopped and instead I’ve been refining my technique and trying to get better at it.”

Scroll down and inspire yourself. Check OregonianArtist Instagram and Etsy for more work.

You can find more info about Oregonian Artist:

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Conservation Department looking to eliminate permits, fees for photography at state parks

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Conservation Department looking to eliminate permits, fees for photography at state parks


© Provided by KTVI-TV St. Louis
Conservation Department looking to eliminate permits, fees for photography at state parks

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – The Missouri Department of Conservation is thinking about getting rid of permits and fees for commercial photographers in state parks and conservation areas after hearing complaints from the public.

Since 2020, photographers and videographers have been required to purchase a permit to shoot in areas managed by the MDC if their activities result-directly or indirectly-in financial gain or profit. Previously, such activities were prohibited at state parks and the like.

The photography permit cost $100 per year, while the video permit carried a $500 fee per day.

The MDC says it received “considerable public feedback” that the permit costs and fees were too much for “hobby” photographers and videographers.

Slick roads cause crashes, close schools

This past December, the Missouri Conservation Commission approved the MDC’s proposal to eliminate the permits and fees. However, the regulation changes would still require Special Use Permits from the MDC under the following circumstances:

  • Access during closed hours or to portions of the area closed to public use;
  • Use of an unmanned aerial system (UAS) or drone;
  • Use of props, sets, or equipment that are more than a single person can carry; or
  • More than 10 people will be participating in the activity over the course of the day.

The public will be able to leave feedback online about these proposed changes from Feb. 2 to March 3 at mdc.mo.gov.

On March 14, the commission will hold a public meeting to give final consideration to the proposal. If approved, the new regulations would take effect July 1.

Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to FOX 2.

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Common wildlife photography mistakes (and how to avoid them)

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Wildlife photography can be both challenging and rewarding, but it can also be frustrating. The genre is fraught with obstacles, many of which you can’t control. The perfect shot from your hide might be spoiled by an unexpected loud noise, or adverse weather conditions may send your subjects back home to their nest, where you’d also rather be. 

These things are largely out of our control, but there are many things that are within our control, and with some careful planning and diligence, you can avoid making simple errors. Here are some of the most common mistakes photographers make when shooting wildlife photography, along with tips on how to avoid them:

Focusing mistakes

The most important thing to get sharp is the subject’s eyes – do this an other parts of the body can be blurred, as here (Image credit: Chris George)

One of the biggest mistakes photographers make when shooting wildlife is getting the focus wrong. This can happen for a variety of reasons, such as using the wrong focus mode, not focusing on the right part of the frame or not focusing quickly enough to keep up with fast-moving animals. 

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The Centre for British Photography’s first exhibition celebrates uproarious, feminist self-portraits

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Jermyn Street is one of London’s oldest and grandest commercial strips. This is Beau Brummel territory – a district of gentlemen’s clubs and costumers. Not so long ago, you’d come to Jermyn Street for fresh shirts, new boots, hours in the sauna, or a discreet lunch with your “niece”.

An alien presence has arrived. Flanked by Alfred Dunhill and the Piccadilly Arcade, until recently the curved glass storefront of 49 Jermyn Street was home to Boggi, an Italian menswear store. But the tastefully besuited mannequins have been replaced by photographs of Spitting Image puppets: the welcome display of a new institution dubbed, rather grandly, the Centre for British Photography.

Enter the double doors and instead of a temple to genteel menswear, you’ll find an uproarious display of self-portraits by naughty women. This is the opening show, Headstrong: Women and Empowerment, an exhibition of contemporary works on a broadly feminist theme curated by photographer Anna Fox, who leads the Fast Forward: Women in Photography project.

There are irresistibly feisty responses to the everyday unpleasantnesses of navigating the world as a woman. A nod to the building’s former occupants comes in Sarah Maple’s Self Portrait with Pocket Square, in which the artist appears beautifully besuited. Standing as though for a wedding portrait in front of a huge floral display, she cups her hands around her protruding (pregnant) belly, a lit cigarette dangling from her vividly painted lips.

A feminist artist who needles cultural expectations around Muslim identity as well as entrenched sexism, Maple is a provocateur, inviting us to revisit preconceptions of how women should behave – here she reminds us of how a pregnant woman’s body becomes public property.

The Iranian-Canadian artist Shirin Fathi explores beauty ideals in her series The Disobedient Nose, inspired by the normalisation of rhinoplasty among Iranian women. Fathi pictures herself as though for a series of northern Renaissance portraits, with the offending protuberance modified and embroidered.

Haley Morris-Cafiero’s The Bully Pulpit (2018) takes its title from Teddy Roosevelt, who used the term approvingly to describe a prominent platform from which to promote an agenda. Today, Morris-Cafiero suggests, the public platform of political office has been replaced by social media, and the politician by the ­online mob. Here, the artist turns the tables on trolls who attacked her following an earlier body of work (Wait Watchers), exploring the way larger bodies are viewed in public space.



Sketches of rhinoplasty performed by me, Shirin Fathi, 2022 (Photo: Courtesy of the artist/Centre for British Photography)


© Provided by The i
Sketches of rhinoplasty performed by me, Shirin Fathi, 2022 (Photo: Courtesy of the artist/Centre for British Photography)

For The Bully Pulpit she tracked down online photos of those who had previously trolled her, then restaged the pictures using costumes, wigs and prosthetics, incorporating the trolls’ comments into the final image. In one, she appears as a man in a towel taking a selfie with “You’re fat and gross and your arms make me want to puke” etched in steam on the mirror. “What’s wrong with body shaming?” says a neon sign behind a white-haired figure in a burgundy vest. Morris-Cafiero uses humour to reclaim space, but also points out how judgmental the online image world is for women.

Photographer and psychological therapist Rosy Martin’s altar-like tableau I didn’t put myself down for sainthood (2018), displayed at the Arnolfini in Bristol last year, explores the ambivalence of care. Posing as a reluctant angel, she invites us to ponder the expectation that women will take the role of caregiver for their elderly parents: a relationship in which love and duty can come bundled up with exhaustion, frustration, resentment and hopelessness.

Together with Jo Spence (one of the most important figures in late 20th century British photography), Martin pioneered “photo therapy”, inviting the subject to revisit their personal history by embodying the figure in an old photograph. Here, we see Martin performing as her mother and father – poses echoed by Spence in a separate display on the floor above.

Headstrong occupies a high-ceilinged central space. Beyond, a shop displays books and high-end prints for sale. Above, a mezzanine offering three little galleries for solo displays. The highlight is a sizzling selection of work by Spence unpicking the “Cinderella myth”: the dream of a white wedding, the aspiration to royalty and the idea that beauty and allure will fix all ills.



I didn’t put myself down for sainthood, Rosy Martin in collaboration with Verity Welstead, 2018 (Photo: Courtesy of the artist/Centre for British Photography)


© Provided by The i
I didn’t put myself down for sainthood, Rosy Martin in collaboration with Verity Welstead, 2018 (Photo: Courtesy of the artist/Centre for British Photography)

Where Spence looked to the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana, a younger photographer, Natasha Caruana, revisits similar territory a generation on, in the year Prince William married Kate Middleton. Fairytale for Sale (2011-13) is a collection of images used by women to sell their wedding dresses. In each picture, the bride has obscured her face (sometimes in an inadvertently creepy way), recasting the wedding photo as the site of unpleasant incident.

British Ghanaian artist and performer Heather Agyepong’s Wish You Were Here revisits popular photography of the early 20th century, in staged scenes evoking Aida Overton Walker, a vaudeville performer known as the “Queen of the Cakewalk”. As with Morris-Cafiero’s series on cyber bullying, ­Agyepong’s restaging of vintage postcard scenes uses photography as a tool of witty subversion.

In the basement is an archive fitted with rolling shelves, and a low-ceilinged gallery for collection displays. The launch show explores the theme of home in 20th century documentary photography, from Bill Brandt’s portraits of 1930s domestic servants in Kensington, to Ken Grant’s claustrophobic ­interiors of neighbours congregating in Birkenhead in the 1980s and 90s.

The English at Home packs a lot into a small room, and acknowledges the importance of mid-century magazines like Picture Post as well as evolving ideas about access, voyeurism and social tourism. A whole wall is given to Daniel Meadows and Martin Parr’s 1973 series showing the front rooms in a terrace of apparently identical houses in Salford.

It’s shown opposite Karen Knorr’s irresistibly naughty series Belgravia (1979), for which she staged tableaux showing London’s upper social set paired with more or less outrageous statements suggesting their wealth, privilege and entitlement.

What’s in a name? In the case of the Centre for British Photography – which feels like it arrived out of nowhere – rather a lot. The venerable Royal Photographic Society, in Bristol, already describes itself as the UK’s leading photography organisation. London is home to the respected Photographer’s Gallery, as well as Autograph (formerly the Association of Black Photographers). The V&A – home to a collection of 800,000 photographs – perhaps has better claim than any to such a title.



The Centre for British Photography, Jermyn Street in St James (Photo: The Centre for British Photography)


© Provided by The i
The Centre for British Photography, Jermyn Street in St James (Photo: The Centre for British Photography)

Rather smaller lettering on the front door identifies this as the home of the Hyman Collection, built up by the art dealer James Hyman and his wife Claire, which has focused largely on British photography since 2010. The centre will be both a public showcase for the ­collection and a platform for ­visiting exhibitions.

Why opt for the hubristic name rather than simply calling it the “Hyman Foundation for British Photography”? Is this an institution with a long-term plan, or an opportunistic pop-up making good use of an empty commercial property?

What is the relationship between the centre and Hyman’s dealership, which sells works by Dafydd Jones, Anna Fox, Heather Agyepong, Bill Brandt and other photographers represented in his collection?

Perhaps these questions are outmoded – in the era of Hauser & Wirth Somerset (the rural British outpost of a commercial gallery that reads much like a well-funded public institution), the lines between public institutions and commercial interests in the art world are now blurred.

For punters and snappers alike, the more important takeaway from this is that London has a new free-to-enter photography gallery – an important new platform for a medium that has long considered itself an overlooked junior sibling in the art landscape.

The Centre for British Photography is now open to the public

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Detour: The new photobook exploring the streets

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A new photobook by Melbourne photographer Adrian Whear celebrates the zany, eclectic and beautiful world of Australia’s urban environments.

Captured over a six year period from 2017 to 2022, Detour features images captured primarily in Melbourne, but also Sydney, Canberra, Adelaide, Broome and even Dhaka, Bangladesh.

'Timeless' . Whear says the character in the image evokes thoughts of Perry Mason and the old noir detective shows.
‘Timeless’ . Whear says the character in the image evokes thoughts of Perry Mason and the old noir detective shows. “I love that the image was captured in 2018 but looks like it could have been taken early the previous century, a look back to a bygone Melbourne when Squizzy Taylor ruled the streets,” he says. Image: Adrian Whear/Supplied

“We live in a modern, vibrant city but Melbourne’s true soul still lies in its hidden alleys and lanes,” says Whear. 

The origins of the 92-page book began in Melbourne’s Covid 19 lockdowns in 2019.

“Initially I set about developing an audio visual presentation for the Bright Festival of Photography, looking at the covid experience through the lens of a street photographer,” he explains.

'Connections'. Image: Adrian Whear/Supplied
‘Connections’. Image: Adrian Whear/Supplied

From there, the 54-year old decided to use the presentation as a starting point to explore his ongoing street photography in a longer form.

The result is Detour, which has not only helped him re-discover his own country of Australia and home town of Melbourne, but is now in its third edition, having sold out each of the 50 copies in its first and second editions.  

Images in the self-published book were captured with a Canon 6D Mark II and a variety of lenses including 24-70 and 24-105mm zooms. 

'Sailing against the tide'. Image: Adrian Whear/Supplied
‘Sailing against the tide’. Image: Adrian Whear/Supplied

Whear says he looks for strong visual aesthetics with a storytelling component in his work. 

“I try to make art of the scenes and streets we frequently walk past and not give a second thought,” he says. 

Detour, the self-published book by photographer Adrian Whear. Image: Adrian Whear/Supplied
Detour, the self-published book by photographer Adrian Whear. Image: Adrian Whear/Supplied

You can purchase a copy of Detour direct from Adrian Whear via [email protected]. The book is $70. 

You can also see Whear’s AV presentation which went on to win a gold medal at the APS Autumn Nationals, below. 



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Stock Photography Market 2023 Research Report Analysis by TOP Competitors, Demand and Size Share Estimation by 2028, Market Divergence

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The MarketWatch News Department was not involved in the creation of this content.

Jan 28, 2023 (The Expresswire) —
Stock Photography Market Report offers an Complete view about the cutthroat scene of the Stock Photography market and incorporates a profound picture of execution by a portion of the key global players finishing on the lookout. Besides, the report offers a full data about the position, extent of development, and possibilities of new members or players on the viewpoint.

● Stocksy United
● Adobe Stock
● 123RF
● Dreamstime
● Zenfolio
● Imagedb
● Getty Images
● Shutterstock
● Veer
● Thinkstock
● iStock
● Smugmug
● Pixpa
● Photos of India
● Pixabay

And More….

{Moving Compound annual growth rate (CAGR) In terms of Revenue in Million}

Get a Sample Copy of the Stock Photography Market Report 2022: https://www.marketgrowthreports.com/enquiry/request-sample/20677366

Brief description about Stock Photography Market Growth 2029:

Stock Photography Marketsize, segment (mainly coveringMajorType (, Free, Paid, ,),End Users (, Scientific Research, Books, Newspapers, Website Building, Advertising, Other,), and regions), recent status, development trendsa and competitor landscape. Furthermore, the 101 pages report provides detailed cost analysis, supply chain.

Technological innovation and advancement will further optimize the performance of the product, making it more widely used in downstream end users. Also, Consumer behaviour analysis and market dynamics (drivers, restraints, opportunities) provides crucial information for knowing the Stock Photography market.

To Know How Covid-19 Pandemic and Russia Ukraine War Will Impact This Market- REQUEST SAMPLE

Stock Photography Market – Competitive and Segmentation Analysis:

As well as providing an overview of successful marketing strategies, market contributions, and recent developments of leading companies, the report also offers a dashboard overview of leading companies’ past and present performance. Several methodologies and analyses are used in the research report to provide in-depth and accurate information about the Stock Photography Market.

The current market dossier provides market growth potential, opportunities, drivers, industry-specific challenges and risks market share along with the growth rate of the global Stock Photography market. The report also covers monetary and exchange fluctuations, import-export trade, and global market

Based on types, the Stock Photography market from 2017 to 2029is primarily split into:

● Free ● Paid ● ●

Based on applications, the Same Day Delivery market from 2017 to 2029 covers:

● Scientific Research ● Books, Newspapers ● Website Building ● Advertising ● Other ●

Get a Sample Copy of the Stock Photography Market Report 2022: https://www.marketgrowthreports.com/enquiry/request-sample/20677366

Key highlights of the report

● Stock Photography market share appraisals for the country and regional level segments ● Combative landscape planning the significant customary trends ● Stock Photography Market tendencies that involve product and technological analysis, drivers and constraints, PORTER’s five forces analysis ● Premeditated advice in essential business segments based on the market estimations ● Intentional guidance for new entrants ● Stock Photography market prophesies all hinted segments, sub-segments, and regional market

Reasons for Buying this Report

● This report provides pin-point analysis for changing competitive dynamics ● It provides a forward looking perspective on different factors driving or restraining market growth ● It provides a six-year forecast assessed on the basis of how the market is predicted to grow ● It helps in understanding the key product segments and their future ● It provides pin point analysis of changing competition dynamics and keeps you ahead of competitors

Top countries data covered in this report:

● North America (U.S., Canada, Mexico) ● Europe (U.K., France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Central and Eastern Europe, CIS) ● Asia Pacific (China, Japan, South Korea, ASEAN, India, Rest of Asia Pacific) ● Latin America (Brazil, Rest of L.A.) ● Middle East and Africa (Turkey, GCC, Rest of Middle East)

Inquire more and share questions if any before the purchase on this report at-https://www.marketgrowthreports.com/enquiry/pre-order-enquiry/20677366

Major Points from Table of Contents:

Global Stock Photography Market Research Report 2022- 2029, by Manufacturers, Regions, Types and Applications

1 Introduction

1.1 Objective of the Study

1.2 Definition of the Market

1.3 Market Scope

1.3.1 Market Segment by Type, Application and Marketing Channel

1.3.2 Major Regions Covered (North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Mid East and Africa)

1.4 Years Considered for the Study (2015- 2029)

1.5 Currency Considered (U.S. Dollar)

1.6 Stakeholders

2 Key Findings of the Study

3 Market Dynamics

3.1 Driving Factors for this Market

3.2 Factors Challenging the Market

3.3 Opportunities of the Global Restaurant Online Ordering System Market (Regions, Growing/Emerging Downstream Market Analysis)

3.4 Technological and Market Developments in the Restaurant Online Ordering System Market

3.5 Industry News by Region

3.6 Regulatory Scenario by Region/Country

3.7 Market Investment Scenario Strategic Recommendations Analysis

Get a Sample PDF of report –https://www.marketgrowthreports.com/enquiry/request-sample/20677366

4 Value Chain of the Stock Photography Market

4.1 Value Chain Status

4.2 Upstream Raw Material Analysis

4.3 Midstream Major Company Analysis (by Manufacturing Base, by Product Type)

4.4 Distributors/Traders

4.5 Downstream Major Customer Analysis (by Region)

5 Global Stock Photography Market-Segmentation by Type

6 Global Stock Photography System Market-Segmentation by Application

7 Global Stock Photography Market-Segmentation by Marketing Channel

7.1 Traditional Marketing Channel (Offline)

7.2 Online Channel

8 Competitive Intelligence Company Profiles

9 Global Stock Photography Market-Segmentation by Geography

9.1 North America

9.2 Europe

9.3 Asia-Pacific

9.4 Latin America

9.5 Middle East and Africa

Get a Sample PDF of report –https://www.marketgrowthreports.com/enquiry/request-sample/20677366

10 Future Forecast of the Global Stock Photography Market from 2022-2029

10.1 Future Forecast of the Global Stock Photography Market from 2022- 2029Segment by Region

10.2 Global Stock Photography Production and Growth Rate Forecast by Type (2022-2029)

10.3 Global Stock Photography Consumption and Growth Rate Forecast by Application (2022- 2029)

11 Appendix

11.1 Methodology

12.2 Research Data Source

Continued….

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To view the original version on The Express Wire visit Stock Photography Market 2023 Research Report Analysis by TOP Competitors, Demand and Size Share Estimation by 2028, Market Divergence

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San Francisco’s acclaimed Pier 24 Photography gallery to close

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The interior of Pier 24 Photography is seen in 2017. The gallery announced it will close when its lease ends in July 2025.


© Image Courtesy Of Yelp User Theart P.

The interior of Pier 24 Photography is seen in 2017. The gallery announced it will close when its lease ends in July 2025.


After more than a decade of showcasing San Francisco’s most extensive photography collection on the city’s waterfront, Pier 24 Photography has announced it will permanently close once its lease with the Port expires in July 2025. 

The Pilara Foundation, which runs the museum, said in a press release that the foundation is “changing its philanthropic focus” to the areas of arts, education and health care research, and Pier 24 Photography will close as a result. 

The decision also comes as the result of a lengthy effort to extend the museum’s lease with the Port, founder Andrew Pilara said.

“After struggling for five years to secure a new lease with the San Francisco Port Commission and its ultimate decision to triple our rent definitely informed our decision to close,” Pilara said in the statement. “Rather than operating with a significantly higher annual budget, we believe that money could be better utilized by local organizations.”

Pilara also noted that the challenges faced by museums in San Francisco were heightened by the pandemic, leaving Pier 24 Photography to reflect on how it can “best serve the city as a whole.”

“We have determined our greatest future contribution to the Bay Area community would be in this new capacity,” Pilara said in the statement. 

The museum opened in 2010 after spending two years remodeling the 88-year-old annex of the Embarcadero’s Pier 24. It has since showcased 11 exhibitions highlighting the work of scores of contemporary photographers, along with the permanent collection of the Pilara Foundation.  

Pier 24 Photography still plans to hold one more exhibition before closing in 2025, and reservations to visit the museum — which is open by appointment only — will reopen in February. 

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Instagramming photographer’s awe-inspiring astronomy photos, from Australia to the U.S

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What happens when you combine a spectacular landscape, a sky full of stars and a very talented photographer? Take one look at photographer Marcin Zajac‘s work and you’ll discover it’s something special.

The California-based amateur photographer has a remarkable talent for astrophotography, turning his camera on the skies over locations such as the Bisti Badlands of New Mexico and the Eastern Australian coast. Unsurprisingly, Instagram has taken notice – his photography account has nearly 69,000 followers to date.

Speaking to MailOnline Travel, the 34-year-old, who originally hails from Warsaw, Poland, reveals: ‘I’ve travelled to many beautiful locations around the world, but my favourites are still the Western U.S states like California, Utah and Arizona. The diversity of the landscape is incredible, from a beautiful coastline, and majestic mountains to many amazing desert rock formations.’

Reflecting on the reaction to his work, Zajac, who is a software engineer by trade, notes that city-dwellers tend to be surprised by how many stars can be seen in a remote area with little light pollution.

A great deal of work goes into immortalising these enchanting skies. Zajac will often return to a location several times before he’s satisfied by the weather conditions, and naturally, he needs to work through the dead of the night. After the nighttime shoot, more work is involved. He explains: ‘I usually take several photos during each night, each typically a few minutes long, and combine them during post-processing.’

The result is a mesmerising portfolio of work, a taste of which can be seen below…

This extraordinary shot by Zajac shows Utah's Reflection Canyon by Lake Powell. He says: 'This is the most remote location I've had a chance to visit, photograph and spend the night at. It might also be one of the most beautiful.' Zajac says accessing the beauty spot was a 'challenge'. He hiked there, carrying eight litres of water, food, a tent, a sleeping bag and all his photo gear on the 20-mile (32km) round-trip trek. He says: 'Overall [it was] 20kg (44lbs) on my back.' However, he admits it was 'worth it' to see the Milky Way arch rise above the canyon at night

This extraordinary shot by Zajac shows Utah’s Reflection Canyon by Lake Powell. He says: ‘This is the most remote location I’ve had a chance to visit, photograph and spend the night at. It might also be one of the most beautiful.’ Zajac says accessing the beauty spot was a ‘challenge’. He hiked there, carrying eight litres of water, food, a tent, a sleeping bag and all his photo gear on the 20-mile (32km) round-trip trek. He says: ‘Overall [it was] 20kg (44lbs) on my back.’ However, he admits it was ‘worth it’ to see the Milky Way arch rise above the canyon at night 

This breathtaking photograph was snared in the Australian coastal town of Kiama while Zajac was visiting the country on a business trip. He recalls: 'I made my way into this small cave and waited for a few hours for the core of the Milky Way to come out. Not familiar with the southern sky I was surprised to also see Jupiter appear soon after - it's the brightest object to the left of the sea stack'

For this enchanting photograph, Zajac angled his camera towards the skies above the Sky Rock Petroglyphs near the city of Bishop, California. The mighty Sierra Nevada mountains can be seen in the background

LEFT: This breathtaking photograph was snared in the Australian coastal town of Kiama while Zajac was visiting the country on a business trip. He recalls: ‘I made my way into this small cave and waited for a few hours for the core of the Milky Way to come out. Not familiar with the southern sky I was surprised to also see Jupiter appear soon after – it’s the brightest object to the left of the sea stack.’ RIGHT: For this enchanting photograph, Zajac angled his camera towards the skies above the Sky Rock Petroglyphs near the city of Bishop, California. The mighty Sierra Nevada mountains can be seen in the background

The Milky Way over Bixby Creek Bridge on California's Big Sur coast is beautifully captured in this shot by Zajac. He says: 'This stretch of the California coast features steep cliffs, hidden beach coves, and one of the most spectacular drives one can take anywhere in the world... there is no light pollution here which makes this a perfect destination for stargazing'

The Milky Way over Bixby Creek Bridge on California’s Big Sur coast is beautifully captured in this shot by Zajac. He says: ‘This stretch of the California coast features steep cliffs, hidden beach coves, and one of the most spectacular drives one can take anywhere in the world… there is no light pollution here which makes this a perfect destination for stargazing’ 

This stunning picture shows the Milky Way over the Pfeiffer Beach archway in California's Big Sur region. As it's a composite picture, meaning the photographs were taken over a series of hours and layered upon one another, Zajac notes that the 'light emanating from the arch is actually caused by the setting sun, not the moon or the stars as one might think'

Pigeon Point Lighthouse, a 19th-century structure that lies 50 miles (80km) south of San Francisco on the California coast, is the subject of this magical shot. Zajac says that the fog in the area often makes it hard to see the stars. He took this shot on an autumn evening when the fog 'relented for a few days', giving him the chance 'to see the vertical Milky Way in tandem with the lighthouse'

LEFT: This stunning picture shows the Milky Way over the Pfeiffer Beach archway in California’s Big Sur region. As it’s a composite picture, meaning the photographs were taken over a series of hours and layered upon one another, Zajac notes that the ‘light emanating from the arch is actually caused by the setting sun, not the moon or the stars as one might think’.  RIGHT: Pigeon Point Lighthouse, a 19th-century structure that lies 50 miles (80km) south of San Francisco on the California coast, is the subject of this magical shot. Zajac says that the fog in the area often makes it hard to see the stars. He took this shot on an autumn evening when the fog ‘relented for a few days’, giving him the chance ‘to see the vertical Milky Way in tandem with the lighthouse’

'In this image, the Milky Way is seen next to Boot Arch in Alabama Hills, a range of hills and rock formations near the eastern side of Sierra Nevada in California,' says Zajac. He adds: 'If, like me, at first you don't see where the name Boot Arch comes from - look inside the arch'

‘In this image, the Milky Way is seen next to Boot Arch in Alabama Hills, a range of hills and rock formations near the eastern side of Sierra Nevada in California,’ says Zajac. He adds: ‘If, like me, at first you don’t see where the name Boot Arch comes from – look inside the arch’ 

'If I had to choose my favourite place on Earth this might be it,' Zajac says of the setting for this awe-inspiring shot. It was captured at McWay Falls on California's Big Sur Coast. Commenting on the location, Zajac says: 'It really has everything - a beautiful cove filled with emerald waters, an 80ft (24m) waterfall falling directly onto the beach, a palm tree making you feel like you're on a tropical island and a perfectly dark sky that shines bright with stars at night'

The 'Alien Throne' sandstone rock formation of New Mexico's Bisti Badlands is majestically captured in this picture by Zajac. The photographer comments: 'The landscape here looks otherworldly, especially once the sun sets and the stars appear. The bright objects to the left of the [rock formation] are the planetary duo of Jupiter and Saturn, which were unusually close that night'

LEFT: ‘If I had to choose my favourite place on Earth this might be it,’ Zajac says of the setting for this awe-inspiring shot. It was captured at McWay Falls on California’s Big Sur Coast. Commenting on the location, Zajac says: ‘It really has everything – a beautiful cove filled with emerald waters, an 80ft (24m) waterfall falling directly onto the beach, a palm tree making you feel like you’re on a tropical island and a perfectly dark sky that shines bright with stars at night.’ RIGHT: The ‘Alien Throne’ sandstone rock formation of New Mexico’s Bisti Badlands is majestically captured in this picture by Zajac. The photographer comments: ‘The landscape here looks otherworldly, especially once the sun sets and the stars appear. The bright objects to the left of the [rock formation] are the planetary duo of Jupiter and Saturn, which were unusually close that night’

This magnificent photograph shows the Milky Way 'shining bright' on Samuel Boardman State Park along the Oregon coast

Zajac says that this striking shot shows the night sky 'spinning around the North Star' while cars drive over California's Bixby Creek Bridge. 'This is my first attempt at capturing star trails caused by the Earth's rotation,' he notes

LEFT: This magnificent photograph shows the Milky Way ‘shining bright’ on Samuel Boardman State Park along the Oregon coast. RIGHT: Zajac says that this striking shot shows the night sky ‘spinning around the North Star’ while cars drive over California’s Bixby Creek Bridge. ‘This is my first attempt at capturing star trails caused by the Earth’s rotation,’ he notes

This eye-opening photograph shows a prescribed fire - a preventative measure carried out to remove vegetation that could contribute to a wildfire - in California's Yosemite Valley. Though he notes that the fire was fully under control, Zajac admits it was 'surreal' to witness it. He adds: 'The thick smoke didn't seem to discourage climbers - if you look carefully you can see lights from their headlamps as they climb up El Capitan [the rock formation to the left]'

This eye-opening photograph shows a prescribed fire – a preventative measure carried out to remove vegetation that could contribute to a wildfire – in California’s Yosemite Valley. Though he notes that the fire was fully under control, Zajac admits it was ‘surreal’ to witness it. He adds: ‘The thick smoke didn’t seem to discourage climbers – if you look carefully you can see lights from their headlamps as they climb up El Capitan [the rock formation to the left]’ 

Zajac captured this atmospheric photograph on Bowling Ball Beach in California's Mendocino County. He notes that the beach's 'strange spherical boulders' are revealed only during low tide

A gnarled tree in the Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest of California's White Mountains is the subject of this bewitching photography by Zajac. He notes that some of the pine trees in this forest have been dated as being nearly 5,000 years old

LEFT: Zajac captured this atmospheric photograph on Bowling Ball Beach in California’s Mendocino County. He notes that the beach’s ‘strange spherical boulders’ are revealed only during low tide. RIGHT: A gnarled tree in the Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest of California’s White Mountains is the subject of this bewitching photography by Zajac. He notes that some of the pine trees in this forest have been dated as being nearly 5,000 years old



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60 Funny & Confusing Photos Without Context, As Shared By This Facebook Page

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Here are the 60 confusing perspective photos without context, as shared by this Facebook page “Some Images”. The Facebook page “Some Images” posts funny and weird pictures without providing any context to them. The images posted on the Facebook page are so bizarre that they might fill your head with lots of questions while making you laugh.

Scroll down and enjoy yourself. All photos are linked and lead to the sources from which they were taken. Please feel free to explore further works of these photographers on their collections or their personal sites.

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Confusing Perspective Photos

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Confusing Perspective Photos

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#31

Funny Photos Without Context

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Funny Photos Without Context

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Lego Photography Is Harder Than You Think

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Anna Bitanga's LEGO version of Omoide Yokocho in Tokyo, left, and another scene called "Galen's Row." @fourbrickstall


© Provided by BuzzFeed News
Anna Bitanga’s LEGO version of Omoide Yokocho in Tokyo, left, and another scene called “Galen’s Row.” @fourbrickstall

Legos, the much-loved plastic toys that you construct, are instantly recognizable around the world. With no signs of slowing down, the Danish company reported a 17% increase in sales during the first half of 2022 alone, partly due to partnerships with movie franchises such as Star Wars and Harry Potter. Though Lego sets have become more intricate, one foundation is still a key component: the Lego brick. But how did the current form of the brick come to be?

Prior to 1958, Lego had a previous version of its beloved interlocking brick. Earlier versions of the brick in the 1930s and ’40s were made of cellulose acetate, but this had limitations regarding construction and durability. After taking five years to find sturdier components to make the Lego brick, the company settled on an ABS (acrylonitrile butadiene styrene) polymer, a nontoxic plastic that is easy to mold and sturdy in its final form. On Jan. 28, 1958, Godtfred Kirk Christiansen, managing director of the Lego Group and son of Lego founder Ole Kirk Christiansen, filed a patent application in Denmark for what we know today as the modern Lego brick. Filing the one patent would prove to be a pivotal moment for the company, leading to a seemingly infinite amount of Lego sets for decades to come. 

To celebrate what is known to many fans as International Lego Day, BuzzFeed News spoke with Anna Bitanga, who is an official Lego community ambassador and photographer.



A US patent for the Lego brick in 1961. USPTO


© Provided by BuzzFeed News
A US patent for the Lego brick in 1961. USPTO

How did you get into photographing Legos? 

I started shooting Lego minifigures as a way to keep taking photos creatively while I was busy raising a 2-year-old. I think it was around 2013. I’d seen an article about how a landscape photographer took photos of his Lego photographer minifig with his phone as part of a 365-day project, and that brought me right back into the Lego hobby. I took the same idea but with a different purpose: to keep shooting portraits when I didn’t really have the time for photography. Faced with a choice between a bulky diaper bag and a bulky camera bag, I went for the baby wipes. But I could easily slip my phone and a minifigure in my pocket and take quick shots of that little plastic toy while my kid played in the park.

How did you get involved with the company? 

I started sharing my photos on Twitter and Tumblr, and found a few people who were also shooting Lego minifigures and models artistically. I found even more people on Instagram and stumbled onto a Lego photography shoutout account there called BrickCentral. After a few years of being in the Lego photography community, I took over BrickCentral in 2019. 

The Lego Group has a program called the Lego Ambassador Network, which allows the company to work with Lego fan communities. I thought BrickCentral would be a good fit, so I applied to join and we were accepted. So I became the Lego community ambassador for BrickCentral.

Did you grow up playing with Legos as a child?

I loved Lego as a child! My favorite theme was space. My brother and I both loved building with Lego bricks: I was more of a collector and he was a My Own Creation (MOC) builder. My parents bought us the same sets so we could do both things…or not fight. Maybe it was the latter.

What have you learned from photographing Legos? What joy does it bring to you? 

Photographing Lego toys is a lot of fun. I get to play twice: build a set and then take photos of it. I love to get into a zone when I’m just building, whether that’s an official set from instructions or free-building with a loose idea in mind. I’m already imagining what photos I’ll be taking of the model while I’m building it, or I start changing things in the models so I can create opportunities for lighting or camera angles. It’s such good fun to try to figure out ways to bring details of a model out or bring a minifigure to life. The whole process is kind of like a puzzle sometimes, and I happen to love puzzles.

Are there ever challenges when shooting the Lego scenes? 

Shooting Lego toys can be really challenging because of the highly reflective and largely planar surfaces. Glare is a big problem. Lighting and getting close can be tough too because of the tiny scale of the buildings and how tight the interiors are — if they’re minifigure-scale, that is. I often have to take models apart or use more specialized gear like macro lenses with different focal lengths to get a decent composition.

Taking a large Lego set outdoors to shoot in a natural environment can be a chore. I have a huge Ikea bag reinforced with Lego delivery boxes to keep the sides from falling in and to keep the base level. I don’t want my Lego set to fall apart or slide around while I’m heading to a location. The last thing I want to see is a few loose bricks at the bottom of the bag. Where did these come from?!

I sometimes get weird looks from people when I’m out with my Lego — I suppose it’s unusual to see someone walking through a forest awkwardly lugging a big blue Ikea bag. I’ve also appeared in lots of tourist photos around New York. Someone will be curious what I’m doing, see the Lego, and then start taking pictures of me taking pictures of Lego.

Taking minifigures outdoors for photos is much easier, so that’s the most common kind of Lego photography. But they are super light and topple over very easily if the slightest breeze blows. Minifigures can be tricky to pose and need extra supports like wires or pins to keep them steady on uneven ground. Using supports often means having to edit them out in Photoshop later, unless you can hide them with perspective.

The last big challenge for me is having to crouch down for the entire photo shoot. It can be really uncomfortable, even though I have an articulating screen. I tend to shoot at ground level, so I’m always hunched over, making sure I have precise focus on these tiny subjects while not casting my shadow on them.

How long does it usually take to make a scene? Are you building them besides shooting them? 

It can take me an hour just to make my custom character. I have drawers of parts and I love to just try different combinations of heads, torsos, legs, and accessories. 

If it’s an official set, the build time is as long as it takes to get it assembled. The longest I’ve spent building an official set was maybe 9-12 hours, but those sets are big like Lion Knights’ Castle.

If I’m making a MOC, that takes me weeks. I’m not a very talented builder and I don’t usually have all the parts I need for my plan, so I need to improvise or order online. I’ve tried building digitally a few times, but the model tends to get away from me since I have access to infinite parts.

Are these sets you’re making off the top of your head, or are they scenes from Lego? Are there building instructions like normal Lego sets? 

My MOCs are usually a result of me wanting to free up more space in a Lego bricks bin: “Oh, I can’t close this white bricks bin anymore. What can I build that will use up a lot of that color?” That’s probably not the typical approach, but it works for me. 

I’m just digging through the bins to see what I can use, so I don’t have instructions. I wanted to make instructions for this medieval alley MOC I made, which I started physically (to use up bricks in another overflowing bin of light bluish gray) and then recreated digitally with Lego’s digital builder called Stud.io. I don’t have a lot of experience in the software, though, and I find it distracts me a lot. It also makes my wish list bloat.

One day, I’ll learn how to make instructions, but I have to set aside time to learn how to do it, and right now, it’s not a priority. Especially since all my file names are galens-row-final-final-final-v3.io.

How do you decide which scene you’re photographing? 

Most of my photos are focused on a character — ideally, one that I’ve created. New muses and interesting minifigures always get me pumped to shoot. I think about where this character might be found and when: indoors or outdoors, in the forest or underwater, in the morning or late at night, and so on. Then I’ll decide what I need to build or bring with me to support the concept.

How long does it usually take to photograph a scene? What equipment are you using? 

I take photos indoors and outdoors from simple minifig portraits to complicated interior shots, so the time and effort I spend on a photo can be anywhere between 20 minutes and three hours. I usually shoot with either my Sony a6500 or a7iii with a macro lens and CPL filter. I have a bunch of macro lenses, but I tend to shoot with a 30mm or 40mm to get more of the environment in the frame. 

I lean more on flash for lighting, even when I’m outdoors during the day. I can’t always get the sunlight I want where I want it to be because of trees blocking it or clouds passing, so I take a little flash attached to a selfie stick. It’s my sun-on-a-stick.

Artistically, I like to backlight my models and create shadows in my Lego photos too, and flash helps me do that. I like to bring out the form rather than flatten everything. 

What would you like people to take away from your Lego scenes? 

I would like people to look at my Lego photos and think how fun it is to bring Lego to life in a photo. I want them to try to do the same because it’s a different way to play and create with Lego. 



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