Malcolm M
Well-known
Malcolm M
Well-known

Paul Wolff, Meine Ehrfahrungen mit der Leica, 1934 auf Deutsch. Just arrived from MW Classic, after a 3 week wait, a reminder and a redirection (they seem to have no concept of what “Delivery address” means).
Maybe don’t quite deserve the plethora of one-star reviews on Trustpilot, but I wouldn’t give them more than two. The website is a clue to their shambolic level of organisation.
JohnGellings
Well-known
Inside - Ros Boisier
mugaproject.com

‘Inside’, imágenes de tiempo lento, estáticas y extáticas
Fotolibro publicado por Muga y Ediciones Posibles

filmtwit
Desperate but not serious
Owens Bill. "Suburbia." Fotofolio Inc; Revised Edition. 119 pages ISBN:1881270408
OwensBill.Suburbia.001 by J Allen, on Flickr

filmtwit
Desperate but not serious
ChrisLivsey
Veteran
Paul Wolff, Meine Ehrfahrungen mit der Leica, 1934 auf Deutsch. Just arrived from MW Classic, after a 3 week wait, a reminder and a redirection (they seem to have no concept of what “Delivery address” means).
Maybe don’t quite deserve the plethora of one-star reviews on Trustpilot, but I wouldn’t give them more than two. The website is a clue to their shambolic level of organisation.
Tough decision on the one or two stars, scraped a 2 on pricing from me but that's gone up a bit recently, bitten more than once there but they do get interesting stuff in and the weekly update is hard to resist a look.
JohnGellings
Well-known
Stephen Shore - Selected Works 1973 -1981
Annie Ernaux - Exteriors
Jerry Hsu - The Beautiful Flower is the World
Robert Adams - Summer Nights, Walking
Yoko Ikeda - Obscura
Ian Bates - Lost Dog
Jacqueline Staforelli - Tungstena
Incoming -
Tim Carpenter - Little
Annie Ernaux - Exteriors
Jerry Hsu - The Beautiful Flower is the World
Robert Adams - Summer Nights, Walking
Yoko Ikeda - Obscura
Ian Bates - Lost Dog
Jacqueline Staforelli - Tungstena
Incoming -
Tim Carpenter - Little
rulnacco
Well-known
rulnacco
Well-known
JohnGellings
Well-known
Wow, that's quite a haul.
boojum
Ignoble Miscreant
In the hopeful but likely vain belief that seeing someone's wonderful work will help me, William Albert Allard: Five Decades and his Portraits of America. Allard's work in the west of cowboys is just fantastic in color and composition. There are a certain few who can really make a camera work for them. Yes, he probably throws away a lot of his shots but those that remain are way better than anything ever coming out of my camera. ;o)
JohnGellings
Well-known
Why would this matter?Yes, he probably throws away a lot of his shots but those that remain
boojum
Ignoble Miscreant
Why would this matter?
I think it is important to remember that we all have more misses than hits. We are not the only ones who have to dig through what we have shot to find keepers. That was my point. Photography is a lot like gold mining, more dross than gold. But there are those nuggets that we can shout about. In this we are all alike.
JohnGellings
Well-known
I agree completely. That editing process is what separates the best from the rest. It ia the hardest part of photography.I think it is important to remember that we all have more misses than hits. We are not the only ones who have to dig through what we have shot to find keepers. That was my point. Photography is a lot like gold mining, more dross than gold. But there are those nuggets that we can shout about. In this we are all alike.
Steve_Pfost
Established
Don't forget about Vanishing Breed! Wonderful work! Some of it is in both those books you mentioned but to have the work as a whole is pretty astounding. It was a total inspiration for me (as a New Yorker) when I documented a true cowboy family when I was with the Dallas Morning News over a decade ago. If you like Allard, Sam Abell's books are pretty solid - similar color work.In the hopeful but likely vain belief that seeing someone's wonderful work will help me, William Albert Allard: Five Decades and his Portraits of America. Allard's work in the west of cowboys is just fantastic in color and composition. There are a certain few who can really make a camera work for them. Yes, he probably throws away a lot of his shots but those that remain are way better than anything ever coming out of my camera. ;o)
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filmtwit
Desperate but not serious

Templeton, Deanna "Scratch My Name on Your Arm." Schunck (July 31, 2011). English. Hardcover. 132 pages
ISBN-10 : 9789490624064
ChrisLivsey
Veteran
I agree completely. That editing process is what separates the best from the rest. It ia the hardest part of photography.
Self selection is hard, what I choose as "best" is often what gets fewer "like" or "upticks" than other shots I post, do I please myself or please my audience, lets not get into sequencing/layout for a book that's a whole other can of worms.
Out to Lunch
Ventor
Templeton, Deanna "Scratch My Name on Your Arm."
JohnGellings
Well-known
Yes, all of the above. You have to trust yourself and some trusted people, but you cannot trust the majority on social media. Social Media seems to thrive on cliches and equipment. Photography is hard once you get to that book making / series phase and want to do something fresh. I do not have the answers.Self selection is hard, what I choose as "best" is often what gets fewer "like" or "upticks" than other shots I post, do I please myself or please my audience, lets not get into sequencing/layout for a book that's a whole other can of worms.
plummerl
Well-known
1964: Eyes of the Storm by Paul McCartney. Full of great photographs taken during 1963 and 1964. What a perspective!
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