It’s been six weeks since I kicked off this photography journey with my iPhone 13, and blimey, has the landscape shifted! Back then, I was wrestling with mobile limitations and chasing creative sparks. Now, I’m standing at the edge of something bigger, clutching a shiny new (I say new, it’s second hand new) Nikon D5300…
The invention of the Calotype and the negative-positive process marks a defining chapter in photography’s history, a revolutionary leap that transformed it from a singular curiosity into a reproducible art form. Conceived by William Henry Fox Talbot in 1835 and refined for public unveiling in 1841, this technique introduced the groundbreaking concept of creating multiple…
I have had the chance to chat with Monika Chabicovsky who is an extraordinary artist whose work blurs the boundaries between reality and fiction, drawing us into an intimate exploration of identity through the art of self-portraiture. Born in Austria and raised amidst a rich tapestry of global cultures—from Japan to Russia, Monika’s international upbringing…
The year was 1839, and the world was on the cusp of something extraordinary. A French artist and chemist, Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre, had developed a process to capture reality in astonishing detail. This innovation, known as the daguerreotype, was the first practical form of photography and forever changed how humanity saw itself and the world.
In an era where we can capture and share images in an instant, it’s easy to take photography for granted. We document our lives daily—our meals, our travels, our fleeting moments—without a second thought. But rewind nearly 200 years, and photography wasn’t just uncommon; it didn’t exist. That is, until one man, Joseph Nicéphore Niépce,…
Kudzu. The word alone carries a heft, conjuring a relentless green tide, a creeping force that swallows all in its path. Known as “the vine that ate the South,” it’s more than a plant, it’s a myth, a quiet conqueror reshaping the American South’s landscapes and lore. In Kudzu, Sabine Bungert and Stefan Dolfen weave…
Over the past week, I’ve been putting ProCamera through its paces—an app that promises to transform your iPhone into a professional-grade photography tool. As someone who’s long sworn by the native camera app’s simplicity, I approached this with equal parts scepticism and curiosity. Yet, after days of shooting in RAW, tinkering with manual settings, and…