Tweet of the Week | @Spiffy Pixdotcom
Time for a new Tweet of the Week—this time from @SpiffyPixdotcom.
Read MorePosted by Rachel Scott | Oct 17, 2017 | 0
Time for a new Tweet of the Week—this time from @SpiffyPixdotcom.
Read MorePosted by Jessica Maldonado | Oct 17, 2017 | 0
You’ll often see a reflection appear below a product, and while you can add these...
Read MorePosted by Scott Bourne | Oct 17, 2017 | 0
This time around on KelbyOne-On-One: 10 Questions with…, Scott Bourne interviews Rick Sammon. Rick...
Read MorePosted by Rachel Scott | Oct 16, 2017 | 0
Meet Ed Balaun—he’s not only a photographer, but he’s a golfer too! Ed likes to...
Read MorePosted by Jessica Maldonado | Oct 15, 2017 | 0
Ever since I started my career as an adventure sports photographer, I’ve been floating in the water with a camera in hand. On one assignment I might be documenting a two-month kayaking trip in southern Chile, and the next month photographing a famous trout fisherman in Wyoming. Editors wanted fresh imagery, and that meant figuring out a way to shoot in the water. And not just simply shooting underwater, but creating a photograph that revealed both under and above the water at the same time. These images, referred to as over/under images, always caught the viewer’s attention.
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