Sunday, October 31, 2010

from Shooting Past 80

In fact, the photographic act requires stamina, sensory acuity, the ability to make snap judgments and to handle equipment that can be delicate as well as bulky. These mental and physical demands, according to researchers, challenge both brain hemispheres and lengthen pathways between brain cells; this, in turn, may promote longer life. “You can infer from brain‑science findings,” insists Cohen, “that older photographers would be high on the list of beneficiaries of brain activity because of all this left‑ and right‑side stimulation. And a new study, selecting for older ‘couch potatoes’ who were [also] engaged in creative pursuits, suggests that activities of the kind photographers are drawn into seem to give a positive boost to the immune system. Which means better overall health and increased longevity.” Photographer Slim Aarons, 80, puts it another way: “A writer can make it up, sitting at his desk, boozing. A photographer has to be on the front lines. Your adrenaline is going. You use everything you have in your body and somehow it translates later on [in life].”

http://iconicphotos.wordpress.com/shooting-past-80/

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Fall 2010: Second Project: Environmental Portraits

Kat

Emma

Emma

AnneMarie

Emma

Lauren

Selina

Selina

Trang

Trang

Trang

Fall 2010: First Project: Odd Angles & Perspectives

Emma


Kat
Lauren


Selina

Lauren

Kat

Kat


Emma

Emma

Monday, October 25, 2010

top 100 blogs for photography students

http://www.onlineclasses.org/2009/09/22/100-best-blogs-for-photography-students/