Comedy Pets Photography Awards Celebrates the Crazy, Cuddly, and Candid Lives of Our Fur Babies– LOOK

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A Life-Changing Event, Beirut, Lebanon. © Michel Zoghzoghi/Comedy Pet Awards,

Now in its fourth year, the Comedy Pet Awards, a photography contest looking to capture the playful, the bizarre, and the hilarious character we all know resides within our fur babies, just concluded in London.

The winner this year was Michel Zoghzoghi, who travels the world shooting pictures of big and fearsome cats among other wildlife. He took first prize when he captured his playful rescues in action, with the rambunctious Max ambushing the timid Alex.

As the winner of the top prize, Michel received £500 cash, a fantastic camera bag
from ThinkTank, and a beautiful bespoke trophy.

“This is still a very young competition in the whole scheme of things, but within a few short years we are already receiving some of the most uplifting, life-affirming hilarious images of pets in the world!” stated Tom Sullam, Co-founder of the Comedy Pet Awards.

“I couldn’t be more excited to share these with you all. Pets have played a fundamental role during the COVID years, and to be able to laugh out loud with these loveable creatures is the reason this competition exists.”

Barkin! New York City, USA © Chris Porsz/Comedy Pet Awards.

“In March 2019 I was sitting in the Union Square New York dog run when I spotted a lady with a pink bag on her hand (to keep her hand clean) throwing a ball to her dog which was sat down facing her. The dog then launched itself and flipped in mid-air to face me and snap!”

Football free kick, Fukuoka, Japan.© Kenichi Morinaga/Comedy Pet Awards
The Three Greys. Landstuhlh, Germany. © Klaus-Peter Selzer/Comedy Pet Awards.

“Karin and her two dogs, don’t they look the same?

Zorro Reborn. Fahrdorf, Germany. © Karl Goldhamer/Comedy Pet Awards

“The avenger of the poor is back, but this time as a dog and not on a horse, but in a car! The obligatory black mask is a must, of course.”

Uplift Anyone’s Day With These Cute And Hilarious Photographs… 



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Colorado nature photographer John Fielder dies after lengthy struggle with cancer

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Nature photographer John Fielder died Friday, Aug. 11, 2023, after a prolonged struggle with pancreatic cancer.
John Fielder/Courtesy photo

John Fielder, a prolific and prominent nature photographer who has lived in Summit County since 2006, died Friday, Aug. 11, after a prolonged struggle with pancreatic cancer, according to an email from his daughter, Katy Fielder.

During a career that spanned 40 years, Fielder worked to protect Colorado’s ranches, open space and wildlife. Over 50 books have been published depicting his Colorado photography. In January 2023, he donated his Colorado photography to History Colorado. The museum is the home of a collection of more than 7,000 photos distilled from 200,000 he made since 1973, and which are now available to the public for personal and commercial use.

“I have never felt that I ‘owned’ my photographs, only that I was borrowing these places to visit and record, and that I would give them back someday,” Fielder wrote in a column for the Summit Daily News talking about his donation.

His photography influenced people and legislation and earned him recognition including the 1993 Sierra Club Ansel Adams Award, in 2011 the Aldo Leopold Foundation’s first Achievement Award ever given to an individual, and in 2017 Colorado Mountain College presented him an Honorary Degree in Sustainability Studies.

He leaves behind two daughters Ashley and Katy, and six grandchildren. John lost his wife Gigi to Alzheimer’s disease in 2005 and their son J.T. to suicide in 2006.

In an effort to continue his spirit and legacy of helping nonprofit environmental organizations for the promotion and funding of their respective land-use protection initiatives, Fielder requested donations be made to Sierra Club, Conservation Colorado, Colorado Open Lands and Save the Colorado.

The family will conduct a private memorial service at a later date.



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2 events for youth will combine hiking and photography

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Got kids, shoes and any kind of camera? Uplands Network of Hoosier Chapter Sierra Club invites families with teens and tweens to take two nature-photography hikes, Aug. 20 and Aug. 26. It’s the first in a series of events sponsored by Sierra Clubs in Indiana.

Hey, go play (and photograph and relax and observe) outside

Connecting people to nature — and getting people outside — is the organization’s general goal. The spaces they create are welcoming and inclusive, and they are always seeking diversity among participants.

Artists for Environmental Restoration members approached Sierra Club members about creating this art-hike project and have reserved a studio specifically for the follow-up, free workshop.

“I’m all about protecting nature through art,” said Marilyn Bauchat, volunteer leader and executive committee member of the Sierra Club Hoosier Chapter, on the phone.

You’ll be in good hands, and it’s free

A certified Sierra Club leader will guide the 1.6-mile hike. Another certified leader will be the “sweep,” who follows the group.

“Keep ’em corralled,” said Sierra Club certified guide Mary Carol Reardon. “Guardians attend to be part of the experience and to comfort their kiddos.”

Upcoming events: A busy time: Fourth Street Festival shares Labor Day weekend with IU Big Ten football

Gotta get a guardian

The only rule is that all participating youth must attend with a guardian.

Before the hike, participants get a brief overview of the project and talk about what makes photographs fun to look at. The young photographers are urged to grab settings that grab them.

But “no selfies. Only nature shots,” Reardon said.

The idea is to be in the present, actually seeing, smelling and hearing the environment: insects, trees, the ground.  “Everything.”

This will be Reardon’s first artist-centered hike, as she normally leads environmental ones, her specialty being removing invasive plants.

It’s not over till it’s over, and that’s not until September

Then, in September, partnering artists open their studio for free follow-up art workshops.

As part of the state Hoosier Chapter of Sierra Club, this particular group leads local outings.

“Activities include regular outings and monthly meetings with topics of interest,” Bauchat said. Sierra Club members also work with more established environmental groups to protect and explore areas throughout the state.

Dena Hawes, a veteran of managing art workshops, will lead the September workshop, which she founded. The kids will meet to design artwork of what their cameras captured.

“In the past two years,” Hawes said, “we have conducted four art workshops for youth and held two youth field trips for students.”

Part of the fun is that the kids can ask questions of the professional artists.

A first for mixing cameras and conifers — plus a “freak out”

A student has a "freak out" moment while looking at crawfish during a 2022 educational youth workshop.

A student has a “freak out” moment while looking at crawfish during a 2022 educational youth workshop.

This will be Artists for Environmental Restoration’s first art hike/drawing workshop, so they don’t yet know if some of the youth will have forest-trepidation.

For instance, last year, the “Crawfish” part of Artists for Environmental Restoration’s youth workshops proved that some kids are fine with holding crustaceans including crawfish, water fleas and pill bugs, but not others.

No camera? They’ve got you covered

If youth don’t have a camera, Hawes and David David J. Emerson Young or Sierra Club hike facilitators will lend them one during the event.

David J. Emerson Young, left, shows kids his painting "Drowning Frogs" while talking to them about nature and art in a past educational youth workshop.

David J. Emerson Young, left, shows kids his painting “Drowning Frogs” while talking to them about nature and art in a past educational youth workshop.

Hawes and Young founded the nonprofit Artists for Environmental Restoration to start conversations. Environmental restoration is a movement that helps a disturbed environment recover.

The local group also comes up with ideas for specific actions for individuals and groups.

Hawes, a multimedia visual artist, has more than two decades of experience in professional research, administration, financial management, supervision and fundraising with domestic and international nonprofits, non-governmental agencies and universities. She has held leadership roles with six domestic and international nonprofits.

Her bachelor’s degree is from Indiana University, her MFA is from University of California, Santa Barbara, and she earned a master’s and doctoral degrees from the Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution, George Mason University, Arlington, Virginia.

Residents of these counties — Monroe, Morgan, Lawrence, Owen, Greene, and the western portion of Brown — are encouraged to participate by emailing [email protected]. Or see registration online at https://tinyurl.com/4us8k3uu.

If you go

WHAT: Two photography-and-art nature hikes, “Tweens & Teens Art Hike” with Sierra Club and Artists for Environmental Restoration.

WHEN: 9:30-11:30 a.m. Aug. 20 and 9:30-11:30 a.m. Aug 26.

WHERE: Meet in parking lot at Griffy Lake boathouse,  3400 N. Headley Road

MORE: Register at the Hoosier Chapter website, https://tinyurl.com/4us8k3uu, or email [email protected]. There is no cost for the event for youth ages 10-17. No unaccompanied minor will be allowed on the hike. Bring water and snacks. In case of heavy rain, the hikes will be canceled.

This article originally appeared on The Herald-Times: Hiking and photography events for youth bring art, nature together

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The Problem of Nature Writing

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The Bible is a foundational text in Western literature, ignored at an aspiring writer’s hazard, and when I was younger I had the ambition to read it cover to cover. After breezing through the early stories and slogging through the religious laws, which were at least of sociological interest, I chose to cut myself some slack with Kings and Chronicles, whose lists of patriarchs and their many sons seemed no more necessary to read than a phonebook. With judicious skimming, I made it to the end of Job. But then came the Psalms, and there my ambition foundered. Although a few of the Psalms are memorable (“The Lord is my shepherd”), in the main they’re incredibly repetitive. Again and again the refrain: Life is challenging but God is good. To enjoy the Psalms, to appreciate the nuances of devotion they register, you had to be a believer. You had to love God, which I didn’t. And so I set the book aside.

Only later, when I came to love birds, did I see that my problem with the Psalms hadn’t simply been my lack of belief. A deeper problem was their genre. From the joy I experience, daily, in seeing the goldfinches in my bird bath, or in hearing an agitated wren behind my back fence, I can imagine the joy that a believer finds in God. Joy can be as strong as Everclear or as mild as Coors Light, but it’s never not joy: a blossoming in the heart, a yes to the world, a yes to being alive in it. And so I would expect to be a person on whom a psalm to birds, a written celebration of their glory, has the same kind of effect that a Biblical psalm has on a believer. Both the psalm-writer and I experience the same joy, after all, and other bird-lovers report being delighted by ornithological lyricism; by books like J. A. Baker’s “The Peregrine.” Many people I respect have urged “The Peregrine” on me. But every time I try to read it, I get mired in Baker’s survey of the landscape in which he studied peregrine falcons. Baker himself acknowledges the impediment—“Detailed descriptions of landscape are tedious”—while offering page after page of tediously detailed description. The book later becomes more readable, as Baker extolls the capabilities of peregrines and tries to understand what it’s like to be one. Even then, though, the main effect of his observations is to make me impatient to be outdoors myself, seeing falcons.

Sometimes I consider it a failing, a mark of writerly competition, that I’d so much rather take private joy in birds, and in nature generally, than read another person’s book about them. But I’m also mindful, as a writer, that we live in a world where nature is rapidly receding from everyday life. There’s an urgent need to interest nonbelievers in nature, to push them toward caring about what’s left of the nonhuman world, and I can’t help suspecting that they share my allergy to hymns of devotion. The power of the Bible, as a text, derives from its stories. If I were an evangelist, going door to door, I’d steer well clear of the Psalms. I would start with the facts as I saw them: God created the universe, we humans sin against His laws, and Jesus was dispatched to redeem us, with momentous consequences. Everyone, believer and nonbeliever alike, enjoys a good story. And so it seems to me that the first rule of evangelical nature writing should be: Tell one.

Almost all nature writing tells some kind of story. A writer ventures out to a lovely local wetland or to a pristine forest, experiences the beauty of it, perceives a difference in the way time passes, feels connected to a deeper history or a larger web of life, continues down the trail, sees an eagle, hears a loon: this is, technically, a narrative. If the writer then breaks a leg or is menaced by a grizzly bear with cubs, it may even turn into an interesting story. More typically, though, the narrative remains little more than a formality, an opportunity for reflection and description. A writer who’s moved to joy by nature, and who hopes to spread the joy to others, understandably wishes to convey the particulars of what incited it.

Unfortunately, no matter how felicitous the descriptions may be, the writer is competing with other media that a reader could be turning to instead, audiovisual media that actually show you the eagle or let you hear the loon. Ever since the advent of color photography and sound recording, lengthy descriptions have become problematic in all genres of writing, and they’re especially problematic for the evangelizing nature writer. To describe a scene of nature well, the writer is hard pressed to avoid terminology that’s foreign to readers who haven’t already witnessed a similar sort of scene. Being a birder, I know what a ruby-crowned kinglet sounds like; if you write that a kinglet is chattering in a willow tree, I can hear the sound clearly. The very words “ruby-crowned kinglet” are pregnant and exciting to me. I will avidly read an unadorned list of the species—black-headed grosbeak, lazuli bunting, blue-gray gnatcatcher—that a friend saw on her morning walk. To me, the list is a narrative in itself. To the unconverted reader, though, the list might as well say: Ira the son of Ikkesh of Tekoa, Abiezer of Anathoth, Mebunnai the Hushathite . . .

If birds are the writer’s focus, there do exist good stories about individual birds (the red-tailed hawks of Central Park) and individual species (the non-stop trans-Pacific flight of bar-tailed godwits), and I can tell, from the new-story links that nonbirding friends are forever forwarding to me, that reports of astonishing avian feats can overcome the public’s indifference to birds, at least momentarily. Whether such stories make converts—and I’ll say it here explicitly: my interest is in making converts—is less clear. The science of birds and their conservation should be interesting to anyone with a modicum of intellectual curiosity, but the world abounds with things to be curious about. The bird-science writer is painfully aware that he or she has only a few hundred words with which to hook a lay reader. One tempting approach to this challenge is to begin in medias res, by a campfire at some picturesque or desolate location, and introduce us to the Researcher. He will have a bushy beard and play the mandolin. Or she will have fallen in love with birds on her grandfather’s farm in Kentucky. He or she will be tough and obsessive, sometimes funny, always admirable. The danger with this approach is that, unless the Researcher emerges as the true subject of the piece, we readers may feel bait-and-switched—invited to believe that we’re reading a story about people, when in fact the story is about a bird. In which case, it’s fair to ask why we bothered getting to know the Researcher in the first place.

The paradox of nature writing is that, to succeed as evangelism, it can’t only be about nature. E. O. Wilson may have been correct in adducing biophilia—a love of nature—as a universal trait in human beings. To judge from the state of the planet, however, it’s a trait all too rarely expressed. What most often activates the trait is its display by people in whom it’s already activated. In my experience, if you ask a group of birders what got them into birds, four out of five of them will mention a parent, a teacher, a close friend, someone they had an intense personal connection with. But the faithful are few, the unpersuaded are many. To reach readers who are wholly wrapped up in their humanness, unawakened to the natural world, it’s not enough for writers to simply display their biophilia. The writing also needs to replicate the intensity of a personal relationship.

One of the forms this intensity can take is rhetorical. Speaking for myself, I’m a lot more likely to read an essay that begins “I hate nature” than one that begins “I love nature.” I would hope, of course, the writer doesn’t really hate nature, at least not entirely. But look at what the initial provocation accomplishes. Although it risks alienating the already persuaded, it opens the door to skeptical readers and establishes a connection with them. If the essay then reveals itself to be an argument for nature, the opening salvo also insures that the writing will be dynamic: will move from a point A to a very different point B. Movement like this is pleasurable to a reader. Fierce attitudes are pleasurable, even in the absence of forward movement. Give me the blistering prose of Joy Williams in “The Killing Game,” a jeremiad against hunters and their culture, or “The Case Against Babies,” as ferocious an anti-birth statement as you’ll ever read, in her perfectly titled collection “Ill Nature.” Indifference, not active hostility, is the greatest threat to the natural world, and whether you consider Williams hilarious or unhinged, heroic or unfair, it’s impossible to be indifferent to her work. Or give me Edward Abbey’s “Desert Solitaire,” an account of his years in the Utah desert, in which he fans a simmering Thoreauvian misanthropy into white-hot fire and wields it against American consumer capitalism. Here again, you may not agree with the writer. You may wrinkle your nose at Abbey’s assumptions about “wilderness,” his unacknowledged privilege as a white American. What can’t be denied is the intensity of his attitude. It sharpens his descriptions of the desert landscape and gives them a forensic purpose, a cutting edge.

A good way to achieve a sense of purpose, strong movement from point A toward point B, is by having an argument to make. The very presence of a piece of writing leads us to expect an argument from it, if only an implicit argument for its existence. And, if the reader isn’t also offered an explicit argument, he or she may assign one to the piece, to fill the void. I confess to having had the curmudgeonly thought, while reading an account of someone’s visit to an exotic place like Borneo, that the conclusion to be drawn from it is that the writer has superior sensitivity to nature or superior luck in getting to go to such a place. This was surely not the intended argument. But avoiding the implication of “Admire me” or “Envy me” requires more attention to one’s tone of written voice than one might guess. Unlike the evangelist who rings doorbells and beatifically declares that he’s been saved, the tonally challenged nature writer can’t see the doors being shut in his face. But the doors are there, and unconverted readers are shutting them.

Often, by making an argument, you can sidestep the tonal problem. An essay collection that’s dear to me, “Tropical Nature,” by Adrian Forsyth and Ken Miyata, begins by serving up a set of facts about tropical rain forests. The facts are seemingly neutral, but they add up to a proposition: the rain forest is more varied, less fertile, less consistently rainy, more insidiously hostile, than the drenched and teeming “jungle” of popular imagination. It’s a very simple proposition. And yet, right away, there’s a case to be made in the ensuing essays—further expectations to be upended, new astonishments to be revealed. Wedded to an argument, the scientific facts speak far more compellingly to the glory of tropical nature than lyrical impressionism, and meanwhile Forsyth and Miyata, as neutral bringers of fact, remain immune to the suspicion of seeking admiration. The premise of Jennifer Ackerman’s best-selling “The Genius of Birds” is likewise simple and sturdy: that “bird-brained” ought to be a compliment, not an insult. Richard Prum’s 2017 book, “The Evolution of Beauty,” reached a wide audience by arguing that Darwin’s theory of sexual selection, which mainstream evolutionary biologists ignored or denigrated for more than a century, can explain all sorts of non-adaptive traits and behaviors in animals. Prum’s book has its flaws—the prose is gluey, and Darwin’s theory was perhaps not quite as forgotten as Prum represents it to have been—but the flaws didn’t matter to me. The theory of sexual selection was an eye-opener, and I learned a lot of cool things about a group of tropical birds, the manakins, that I otherwise might never have known. Such is the power of a compelling argument.

For the nature writer who isn’t a polemicist or a scientist, a third avenue to intensity is to tell a story in which the focus is on nature but the dramatic stakes are emphatically human. An exemplary book in this regard is Kenn Kaufman’s “Kingbird Highway.” Kaufman grew up in suburban Kansas in the nineteen-sixties, became an obsessive birder (nicknamed Kingbird), and conceived the ambition, after he dropped out of high school, of breaking the record for the most American bird species seen in a calendar year. The record is quickly established as the dramatic goal, the protagonist’s coördinating desire. And then, immediately, we’re presented with an impediment: the teen-aged Kaufman has no money. To visit every corner of the country at the right time of year, a birder needs to cover huge distances, and Kaufman decides he’ll need to hitchhike. So now, in addition to a goal and an impediment, we have the promise of a classic road adventure. (It’s important to note that, just as we don’t have to be pedophiles to connect with Humbert’s pursuit of Lolita, we don’t need to care much about birds to be curious about what happens to Kaufman. Strong desire of any kind creates a sympathetic desire in the reader.) As Kaufman makes his way around the country, he’s attentive to the birds, of course, but also to the national mood of the early seventies, the social dynamics of bird-watching, the loss and degradation of natural habitat, the oddball characters along the way. And then the book takes a beautiful turn. As life on the road exacts its toll on the narrator, he feels increasingly lost and lonely. Although seemingly a quest narrative, the book reveals itself to have been, all along, a coming-of-age story. Because we care about the teen-aged Kaufman, we stop wondering if he’ll break the record and start asking more universally relatable questions: What’s going to happen to this young man? Is he going to find his way home? What sets “Kingbird Highway” apart from many other “Big Year” narratives is that it ultimately ceases to matter how many species Kaufman sees in a year. It’s only the birds themselves that matter. They come to feel like the home that he’s been yearning for, the home that will never leave him.

Even if we could know what it’s like to be a bird—and, pace J. A. Baker, I don’t think we ever really will—a bird is a creature of instinct, driven by desires that are the opposite of personal, incapable of ethical ambivalence or regret. For a wild animal, the dramatic stakes consist of survival and reproduction, full stop. This can make for fascinating science, but, absent heavy-duty anthropomorphizing or projection, a wild animal simply doesn’t have the particularity of self, defined by its history and its wishes for the future, on which good storytelling depends. With a wild-animal character, there is only ever a point A: the animal is what it is and was and always will be. For there to be a point B, a destination for a dramatic journey, only a human character will suffice. Narrative nature writing, at its most effective, places a person (often the author, writing in first person) in some kind of unresolved relationship with the natural world, provides the character with unanswered questions or an unattained goal, and then deploys universally shared emotions—hope, anger, longing, frustration, embarrassment, disappointment—to engage a reader in the journey. If the writing succeeds, it does so indirectly. We can’t make a reader care about nature. All we can do is tell strong stories of people who do care, and hope that the caring is contagious.

This is drawn from “Spark Birds.”

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Fashion, music, photography? Here are a few art clubs at SDSU for campus creatives – The Daily Aztec

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Are you a creative incoming freshman? Transfer student? Looking for something new and artsy? With over 300 clubs on campus, finding your niche at San Diego State University can be challenging at first glance, but for fresh creatives and those involved in diverse forms of art, there are countless opportunities at SDSU to find your community. 

 

SDSU Arts & Culture Club (ACC)

This aims to connect students to arts and culture in the San Diego area. Those interested in art, music, film, photography, dance and poetry will enjoy all this club has to offer. The club holds weekly meetings to discuss current arts and culture-related events, play fun games, participate in art-related activities and socialize. Emma Fitzpatrick, co-president and senior anthropology major, described her experience of becoming more creative while being involved in her club. “In terms of planning meetings as the co-president, my creativity has definitely been pushed and challenged because (at) each meeting, we present a new spotlight on an artist, art piece or something relevant happening in the art world,” she said. “We call it a culture drop.” Fitzpatrick also said that ACC has allowed her to branch out her skills and meet new people on campus. Check out SDSU Arts & Culture Club’s Instagram, @sdsu.acc, for information about future meetings and events.  

 

Members of the Arts and Culture Club pose at the club’s end of year showcase (Courtesy of Emma Fitzpatrick)

 

Skull and Dagger Dramatic Society 

Those interested in expressing themselves through theater arts will find a home in Skull and Dagger, SDSU’s largest theater company and oldest club. This student-run club works to expand students’ reach to various forms of art. Sydney Villa, club president and senior film production major, discussed the opportunity growth within the club. “I was fortunate to direct a piece almost two years ago with the club,” she said. “It was one of the first things I directed in college, so the opportunity helped me realize my potential and allowed me to learn.” The

club showcases one full show each semester, and some notable works include “The Motherf— With the Hat” and “Little Women.” The club meets weekly to provide production updates, play fun games, build a community and offer a space for students to share their own projects. At the end of every year, the club holds a formal gathering called “Uncaged,” an event where students present their work from the semester. Find updates and information about the club on their Instagram, @skullanddaggersd.

 

The Look Magazine 

There’s a place for everyone at The Look Magazine, SDSU’s first student-run art, fashion and design publication. The Look Magazine values creative expression, new perspectives and diverse voices. This magazine has designated roles for those interested in modeling, blogging, beauty, graphics, photography, events and public relations. Along with the club’s weekly meetings, plenty of unique events are held to keep students busy for the year. Launch Parties are held to celebrate semesterly paperback issues, accompanied by local music and drag performances. The club has also hosted various house shows, where local artists take the stage and students can enjoy a night of good music. For more information about getting involved in this eccentric vogue club, visit their website or Instagram, @thelooksdsu

 

SDSU Photography Club 

SDSU’s Photography Club strives to provide community outreach that serves as a calling to further promote art through the lens of growth and creativity. Those with  a photographic eye — regardless of experience — are encouraged to join the club’s meetings, which are bi-weekly. This club also holds outings to picture-perfect locations like Torrey Pines and Coronado. Another perk of this club is workshops to build skills with camera work. Learn more about the Photography Club from their Instagram, @sdsuphotographyclub, or visit their website.

 

Kolorhouse.sdsu

Kolorhouse.sdsu has built its way into being a creative staple on campus by connecting creatives through on campus events. Kolorhouse.sdsu has fostered a community through exploring the art of expression. The club is committed to breaking the stereotypes of creativity within society by promoting the essence of art in all forms. Kolorhouse.sdsu has held themed photoshoots, student stylist showcases and student short film festivals. The club also manages to host entertaining events to keep SDSU artists engaged. Kolorfest is always an anticipated end-of-semester event, including local bands, fashion shows featuring local stylists and local vendors. Overall, it’s an inspiring event that brings the community together. For more information about Kolorhouse.sdsu visit their website or instagram, @kolorhouse.sdsu.



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Photography of Zelda Part 3: My journey through Tears Of The Kingdom

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Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom photo mode image

Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom – you’ll see such things (Picture: Ryan O’D)

A reader concludes their visual journey through Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom, this time focusing on the landscapes and locations of Hyrule.

I can’t emphasise enough how beautiful Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom is. The first time you dive through the sky is just breathtaking. The sheer verticality of the world and the views this offers are absolutely stunning. The variety of landscapes and places to visit is unbelievable, with the world being at least double the size of Breath Of The Wild.

Revisiting your former haunts is endlessly fascinating, as something has always changed, offering a new surprise to the familiar. Without doubt Tears Of The Kingdom offers the most attractive and rich world that the Zelda series has ever seen. It is an absolute joy to explore all its secret corners and discover magic at every turn. How Nintendo will ever top this, I can’t even imagine! Anyway, here are the last of my photos, which hopefully show some of the artistry of the game. Thanks!

GC: Ryan created similar Reader’s Features for Zelda: Breath Of The Wild, from 2017, and you can see part 1 here and part 2 here. The first part of the Tears Of The Kingdom feature is available here and the second part here.

(WARNING: I haven’t included any bosses or major secrets but if you want to stay completely spoiler free you may wish to stop reading now.)

By reader Ryan O’D

The reader’s feature does not necessarily represent the views of GameCentral or Metro.

You can submit your own 500 to 600-word reader feature at any time, which if used will be published in the next appropriate weekend slot. Just contact us at [email protected] or use our Submit Stuff page and you won’t need to send an email.


MORE : Nintendo Switch sells 1 billion video games as Tears Of The Kingdom passes 18 million


MORE : Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom is the best selling game of 2023 so far


MORE : Two of the rarest Legend Of Zelda games are now on Nintendo Switch

Follow Metro Gaming on Twitter and email us at [email protected]

To submit Inbox letters and Reader’s Features more easily, without the need to send an email, just use our Submit Stuff page here.

For more stories like this, check our Gaming page.



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Catch up on Beaufort County news + Friday’s nature photo of the day

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Good afternoon on Friday, Aug. 11.

Here’s today’s top news:

1. More rain! It’s already showered a bit in Bluffton this afternoon, and the National Weather Service says we should expect more rain with possible isolated-to-scattered severe thunderstorms and brutal heat. Check out the weekend outlook here.

  • The story above deals with the immediate, but what about looking a little longer into the future? The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration offers a forecast for the upcoming fall, which officially starts Sept. 23. If you like warmer temperatures and rainy weather, it will be good news. (Still better than snow, right? How’s that for looking at the bright side?)

2. A DNA match has led investigators to identify the remains found in a burned car Saturday as those of 49-year-old Clifford Lamont Jenkins, who had been missing since July. The Sheriff’s Office has ruled his death a homicide. Reporter Sebastian Lee shares this update.

3. A Yemassee man was killed in Jasper County after his truck struck a tree Thursday night, according to the South Carolina Highway Patrol.

4. Whether you are a longtime resident or a curious vacationer, you might have a question or two about the Lowcountry, its history or wildlife or festivals or businesses. Reporter Sarah Claire McDonald has set up a way for you to ask these questions, and she’ll answer as many as she can. Find the form here.

A few statewide headlines to note:

Photo finish

Don Cooper of the Riverbend neighborhood of Sun City shared this photo of a tree frog seeking some relief from the heat in a flower. (At least, that’s what we imagine it is doing.)

Don Cooper of the Riverbend neighborhood of Sun City shared this photo of a tree frog seeking some relief from the heat in a flower. (At least, that’s what we imagine he is doing.)

Don Cooper of the Riverbend neighborhood of Sun City shared this photo of a tree frog seeking some relief from the heat in a flower. (At least, that’s what we imagine he is doing.)

Attention, photographers! Send in your pictures of Lowcountry scenes. Email [email protected], and please include your name and where you took the shot. Submitting a photo gives The Island Packet and Beaufort Gazette permission to publish it.

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Thank you for reading!

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Comedy Pet Photography contest winners announced: See the funny photos

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Pets and animal lovers rejoice: the annual Comedy Pet Photography winners have been announced for 2023, and the photo and video winners don’t disappoint.

The global awards, now in their fourth year, were created by Paul Joynson-Hicks and Tom Sullam, “to highlight the positive and vital role that pets have in our lives and to encourage engagement around animal welfare.”

READ MORE: Maui Humane Society overwhelmed after wildfire; how you can help

The contest calls on all pet and animal lovers to submit hilarious images and videos of their funny furry friends for a chance of winning the prestigious title of Comedy Pet Photographer of the Year.  The top prize winner gets $634 in cash (500 pounds), a camera bag and a trophy.

“This is still a very young competition in the whole scheme of things, but within a few short years we are already receiving some of the most uplifting, life affirming hilarious images of pets in the world!” Tom Sullam, Co-founder of the Comedy Pet Photo Awards, said. “We couldn’t be more excited to share these with you all. Pets have played a fundamental role during the covid years, and to be able to laugh out loud with these loveable creatures is the reason this competition exists!”

2023 Comedy Pet Photography Winners

The overall winner came from Michel Zoghzoghi with a photo of his two rescue kittens, Max and Alex, called “A life Changing Experience.” The video winner, “Cool Catch” by Emma Hay, can be seen in the video player at the top of this page.

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The Comedy Pet Photography Awards 2023 Michel Zoghzoghi Beirut Lebanon Title: A life changing event Animal: cats Location of shot: Lebanon

Zoghzoghi, whose photo also won the Best Cat Category, is a professional wildlife photographer from Beirut, Lebanon and has traveled the world taking photos of much bigger cats.

READ MORE: Watch: Man dresses up in realistic dog costume, gets taken for a walk

“Max and Alex form a lethally cute duo.  I had more fun and surprises taking photos of these two characters, than during my most adventurous wildlife photography trips,” he said. “I am extremely happy and proud to have won it as all the finalists were really outstanding and some of them made me laugh to tears. Pets are a very, very important part of our families and should be celebrated.”

Boudicca the ferret, whose owner is from Kyiv, Ukraine, took home top prize in the All Other Creatures category.

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The Comedy Pet Photography Awards 2023 Darya Zelentsova Amherst United States Title: The first outdoor walk Description: Tiny happy ferret Boudicca (only 2,5 month old!) enjoys her first outdoor walk. Animal: Boudicca The Ferret Location of shot: Amh

“Ferrets almost never win anything in major international photo contests, and I’m glad to promote them as amazing pets and models,” Boudicca’s owner Darya Zelentsova said. They are intelligent, cheerful, social little creatures with great personalities and overloading cuteness – when you have a ferret, you literally never stop smiling!”

READ MORE: English zoo confirms: Viral Chinese bears are not people in costume

The people’s choice award went to Chris Porsz from the UK with his snap of a dog jumping in front of surprised onlookers in a park in New York.  “Barking” also took the top prize in the Dog Category.

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The Comedy Pet Photography Awards 2023, Chris Porsz,PETERBOROUGHUnited Kingdom Title: Barking!Animal: Border CollieLocation of shot: Union Sq, New York

“As an amateur street photographer, I have walked many, many miles and this is still my best and favourite photograph.  And it was one I nearly didn’t take.  But by some fluke, just as the owner of the dog threw the ball, I instinctively raised my camera and fired away,” Porsz said. “The dog was looking at the owner and then launched itself and flipped in mid-air to catch the ball. Out of the five images taken this was the magic shot which fortunately was in focus!”

Other winners include:

  • Pets Who Look Most Like Their Owner’s Category: Klaus-Peter Selzer with The Three Greys

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The Comedy Pet Photography Awards 2023Klaus-Peter Selzer66763 DillingenGermany Title: The three GreysDescription: Karin and her two dogs. Don’t they all look almost the same? …Animal: Afghan WindhoundsLocation of shot: Landstuhl, Germany

  • Junior Category: Monyque Macedo Dos Santos ‘Is it a seal or is it a dog?’

5.-Junior-Category-Winner-Monyque-Macedo-Dos-Santos_Is-it-a-seal-or-a-dog-copy.jpg

The Comedy Pet Photography Awards 2023Thaís FerreiraBrasíliaBrazil Title: Is it a seal or a dog?Animal: The dogLocation of shot: BRASÍLIA, BRASIL.

The 2024 competition will be open for entries next year on the Comedy Pet Photo website at www.comedypetphoto.com.

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Hitchcock Nature Center hosts Perseids meteor shower viewing

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Residents near and far are invited to bring their lawn chairs, blankets and telescopes and join Pottawattamie Conservation on Saturday at 8 p.m. for the Perseids Shower Night Sky Event at Hitchcock Nature Center.

The Perseids meteor shower is considered the best meteor shower of the year, often with 50 to 100 meteors falling per hour during its peak in mid-August.

Hitchcock Nature Center, 27792 Ski Hill Loop in Honey Creek, offers a good location for viewing the shower and other celestial bodies because of its distance from city lights and large rolling hills that offer obstructed views of the night sky.

The Omaha Astronomical Society will be present at the park with telescopes that offer visitors close-up views of the night sky’s celestial bodies.

This event is free with a $5 per vehicle park entry fee or Pottawattamie Conservation Foundation membership.

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Vehicles will be allowed into the park, spaces permitting, until 10 p.m. All vehicles will need to exit the park by midnight.

The Perseids Shower Night Sky Event is dependent on weather and cloud cover. Those planning on attending should check pottconservation.com or the Hitchcock Nature Center Facebook page for any changes or cancellations before they head out.

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How to photograph the stunning Perseid meteor shower this weekend

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Want to know how to photograph the Perseid meteor shower? The annual phenomenon technically began in mid-July, but peaks this weekend on August 12-13, and will continue through until August 24. 

Technically, the most prolific meteor shower of the year is the Geminids in December, when it’s possible to see up to 120 shooting stars per hour. However, the most reliable – and easily the best in 2023 in the northern hemisphere – is the Perseid meteor shower every August. 

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