Blog
Lunch Atop A Skyscraper: The Story Behind The 1932 Photo
Timothy Griggs
How to take great family portraits this holiday
Timothy GriggsWith family from out of town and everyone dressed to the nines, the holidays are a great time to shoot family portraits. Photographer Tony Northrup shares his secrets for shooting the best family photos this holiday. Be sure to check out his website for even more tips and tricks on photography. northrupphotography.com
Food Photography Tips to Make Thanksgiving Photos Look Great
Timothy GriggsFrom the classic turkey dinner on Thanksgiving to the unusual dishes that are passed down through the family that connect us with great grandparents, what we serve on the holidays reflects who we are as a culture and the cultural traditions we come from.
Our desired to share food both physically with friends and family and virtually through social media is a tradition that goes back for millennia celebrating the importance of the harvest and the power of food to unite families, communities, and nations.
It’s Finally Here: Canon Announces The New EOS 5D Mark IV DSLR Camera
Timothy GriggsThe wait is finally over! Today Canon announced the successor to the legendary 5D Mark III and it was well worth the wait. It has a new 30.4 Megapixel full-frame CMOS sensor, new Digic 6+ processor, 61 AF points, 4K video, built-in GPS and Wi-Fi (as a landscape photographer that's a feature I've been looking forward to), a new 3.2 touchscreen and an ISO range of 100–32,000; expandable up to 50–102,400. Our friends at Adorama made a fantastic video with luxury wedding photographer Vanessa Joy looking at all the new features the camera has to offer. If you're in New York...
World Photo Day: How The Daguerreotype Changed The World
Timothy GriggsToday in 1839 Louis-Jaques-Mandé Daguerre, a French artist and photographer, introduced the Daguerreotype, the first practicable method of obtaining permanent images with a camera. The Daguerreotype photographic process starts with a sheet of silver-plated copper polished to a mirror finish, treated with fumes of iodine and bromine to make its surface light sensitive. exposed in a camera (for as long as fifteen minutes) and then developed over hot mercury, fixed by immersion in a solution of sodium thiosulfate and washed with distilled water. The George Eastman Museum explores the history and development of the Daguerreotype in the video below.