Photos by James Huse. This is high-speed photography at its finest.
Source: photojojo
New Cinemagraphs from Jamie Beck and Kevin Burg! These’ll have you staring.
via laughingsquid
Source: fromme-toyou
The last time you were at the top of a skyscraper, you could swear you saw the curvature of the earth. It might’ve looked like this.
Wouter van Buuren shoots from cranes and rooftops to make these amazing panoramic globes. They’re like tiny planets x10000.
Source: photojojo
This egg-shaped camera is made specially to shoot 360-degree panoramic photos at 14 mega-pixels.
It’s wireless, so you can control it with your phone or computer, too!
Tamaggo’s Dedicated 360 Panoramic Camera
via Engadget
Source: photojojo
So this Kickstarter camera looks kind of amazing.
It’s a Digital Bolex, the digital counterpart to the 16mm old-school Bolex cinema camera. It shoots in RAW for maximum video quality.
This means each frame is a photo of printable quality, too.
Digital Bolex an Affordable Cinema Camera That Shoots RAW
via Engadget
This looks like it’s going to be sick.
Source: photojojo
Source: everysummersun
Wave rock formation in Arizona, formed out of ancient sand dunes and creating that crazy depth perception-destroying optical illusion.
Source: daniconqueso
Photography’s renaissance rests on a few unbeatable advantages. Compared to other kinds of content—songs and movies—photos are, technically and legally, much easier to share and mash up. If you come up with a great, unexpected new site centered on TV shows, you need to get huge servers and pay for expensive bandwidth and licensing deals. If you’ve got a fantastic new take on photos, often all you need is an app. That app lives on a smartphone, which is the world’s most popular point-and-shoot camera. For the first time, cameras are connected to the Internet, they know who your friends are, they know where you are, and they can be constantly updated with new powers. The camera is powerful (Apple’s iPhone 4S is 8 megapixels) and intelligent, and the pictures keep getting more interesting.
Why photography is every tech product’s most valuable feature.
Source: Fast Company
Before the land of Facebook was created, this is how folks kept track of their friends.
A vase titled “My Friends, 1892.”
Source: anonymousworks.blogspot.com
Slide Light is pretty much the coolest lamp we’ve ever seen. It’s specially designed to hold your favorite slides, so you can change the mood of your house with your own photos!
Slide Light: Illuminate Your Home With Your Own 35mm Slides
via petapixel
Source: suck.uk.com
Source: Flickr / thesertaysphotoz
Photo portrait idea: Shoot the details of your subjects and make them into triptychs!
26 Fantastic Triptychs of Strangers
Photos by theblackstar
Source: Flickr / theblackstar









