Catzilla
Catzilla attacks!
Photographer Julia O’Farrow is a Brooklyn-based visual storyteller working across film and photography. With a cinematic eye shaped by years of collecting and studying images, she brings intention and energy to everything she turns her lens toward — from street portraits to cultural moments alive with community. We’re thrilled to feature her in this edition of the Flickr x Black Women Photographers Spotlight.
Catzilla attacks!
Troy Holden has a deep connection to the history of street photography in San Francisco, where he has met and been inspired by icons of the genre.
Jason Travis is the artist behind “Persona,” a long-running photo series that features a portrait of an individual alongside a tabletop view of the contents of that person’s bag, neatly organized. Watch The Weekly Flickr to learn more about this fascinating project.
You took off your shoes for #TwitterTuesday! Here is a selection of our favorites.
Sometimes we have to face to difficult choices, which we call it dilemma.
In this week’s Flickr Friday we invite you to take your best shot for this theme #Dilemma.
For Kari Greer, working means jumping in the midst of a burning wildfire to take photos of the men and women who fight them. “When I’m in the midst of the heat and the smoke, it’s just a sensation of complete awe.”
The theme for last week’s #FlickrFriday was a happy one: #SingingInTheRain. We got a lot of submissions with beautiful sound of music and creativity.
The top-25 mobile photos on Flickr in 2014 show that all of us have the gear we need to take great pictures already in our pocket.
Éric Lafforgue is a professional photographer who travels for well-known magazines, documenting people in situations that most of the world doesn’t get to see. Many of the places he goes, such as Somalia and North Korea, are considered off-limits to most foreigners.