Learn how to take better travel photos with tips from some of my fav photographers - this isn't your typical how-to post, we've got a bit of attitude goi...
Shrouded for years in myth and mystique—some of it by her own design—the artist, entrepreneur, and style icon Michèle Lamy is now coming to the table (of her own creation) to eat, talk, and change the world.
With motivation coming from personal family experiences, Bruce Gilden began photographing drug addicted women in 2015. These portraits have all been taken on the streets of notorious neighborhoods where drugs can be found and money earned to support the subjects’ habits. Gilden’s 2018 book “Only God Can Judge Me” is dedicated to women he photographed over the span of three years in Miami. Earlier this year he visited Philadelphia’s notorious Kensington neighborhood and more recently, traveled to Sao Paolo’s “Cracolândia” (Crackland). Located near Sao Paolo’s busiest train station, Luz, drugs can easily be bought and consumed in Crackland. Despite attempts to redevelop the area and dissipate the concentration of drug users, prostitutes, and homeless people, dealers and addicts still flock to these streets.
Today we are behind the scenes With Bre D and Dani B! These two teamed up so we can bring some fun concepts together.
There was a little girl, Who had a little curl, Right in the middle of her forehead. When she was good, She was very good indeed, But when she was bad she was horrid.-- Henry Wadsworth LongfellowJackie, 25, meh