Weekly Snapshot with Flickr Social, 5/10/2024
Check out this week’s installment of ‘Weekly Snapshot with Flickr Social’ to see some of our favorite Flickr Social shots of the week!
Check out this week’s installment of ‘Weekly Snapshot with Flickr Social’ to see some of our favorite Flickr Social shots of the week!
Friday has arrived! Check out this week’s installment of ‘Weekly Snapshot with Flickr Social’ to see some of our favorite Flickr Social shots of the week!
Happy New Year! Check out the first installment of Weekly Snapshot with Flickr Social for 2024 to see some of our favorite Flickr Social shots of the week!
Check out this week’s installment of Weekly Snapshot with Flickr Social to see some of our favorite Flickr Social shots of the week!
Check out this week’s installment of Weekly Snapshot with Flickr Social to see some of our favorite Flickr Social shots of the week!
Check out this week’s installment of Weekly Snapshot with Flickr Social to see some of our favorite Flickr Social shots of the week!
Max Ellis may not know what the squirrels in his backyard are going to do next, but there’s no doubt it will be interesting – and probably hilarious.
Richard Renaldi believes we are all connected. The New York City fine art photographer is the man behind “Touching Strangers,” the wildly popular photo series that explores human connection through intimate portraits of people who have never met.
“My perception of ballerinas, as a feminist, was that they were starving themselves for their job, that they were doing what they did for a man that was telling them what to do, that they didn’t want to grow up,” says Lucy Gray. “But,” she adds, “as a photographer, your job is to hunt down your prejudices and get rid of them.”
As a photographer specializing in photographing people and their pets, Norah Levine has met many people who have a deep connection to their animals. But once she began photographing the homeless and their pets, she realized how much of a lifeline animals can truly be.
John Wilhelm features intricate compositions of wacky scenarios in his photos — everything from riding on the back of a rabbit through the snow to battling an octopus during bath time.
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.”