Subway Safari

Subway SafariWho knew the C train goes from W 4th all the way to Africa? Well, apparently the answer is five million people per year, and last weekend I made my first pilgrimage along the route ending at the American Museum of Natural History. Loaded up with a 50mm and the big white telephoto, I roamed the hallowed halls with the sole intention of photographing the famous dioramas. I must admit, I felt a wee bit self-conscious shooting with the hefty zoom, a feeling only heightened by a backward glance that revealed hoards of tourists snapping happily with little more than iphones in hand. But soon the apprehension wore off, and I began to really enjoy the entire experience. The static models and restrictive perspective contrasted greatly with my usual style of street shooting, but the constrained environment presented a new and interesting challenge. The question became how can I photograph the African Mammal hall, a truly historic attraction viewed by more eyeballs than I care to imagine, in a new or unexpected way? How can I create images so that a passerby might actually mistake them for something shot on location, manipulating framing and perspective to eliminate the posed feel altogether? Often I found myself going the opposite route, seeking out overtly opaque drools or awkwardly taxidermied animal expressions, highlighting the quirky details that made each presentation unique. In the end, I am neither foolish nor egotistical enough to believe that I am the first (or last) to create  images like these, but it was awesome to play tourist-with-a-camera for a day at this New York icon.

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Foxy Friday

Foxy Friday

Foxy Friday

What’s this, Frenchie Friday has been hacked!? In honor of our impending trip back home, I have dedicated this Friday’s post to her fatness, the eternally voluptuous Foxy Cleopatra. And in true Foxy form, almost all of the photos are of her lounging

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The Brenzier Method

What the heck is a Brenzier? Well, Brenzier is actually the last name of photographer Ryan Brenzier, the man who popularized a technique that now bears his namesake. In reality, The Brenzier Method is less of a method and more of an “mosaic,” a compilation of images stitched together to form a final product. But unlike the typical landscape photos that benefit from stitching, squeezing in more scene to create sprawling panoramas, The Brenzier Method strives for compression. Read on to learn more, or if you would rather just skip all the boring photo speak, feel free to do so now.

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