Friday, November 27, 2009

Madam Nicole Jauvin, Deputy Minister and President of Canadian Northern Development Agency (CanNor)

Madam Nicole Jauvin, Deputy Minister and President of Canadian Northern Development Agency (CanNor)  at a reception given in honor of Daryl Dolynny

Nicole Jauvin at a reception given in honor of Daryl Dolynny, Laureate, 2009, acknowledged for his excellence in "commercial services", category of Lauriers de la PME - Réception donnée en l'honneur de Daryl Dolynny, Lauréat 2009 du prix d'excellence pour by you.
Madam Nicole Jauvin, Deputy Minister and President of Canadian Northern Development Agency (CanNor) at a reception given in honor of Daryl Dolynny, Laureate, 2009, acknowledged for his excellence in "commercial services", category of Lauriers de la PME. This national award, organized by RDEE Canada, honors Francophone entrepreneurs for their economic performance and their contribution to Canadian economy.
Madam Jauvin, president of Canadian Northern Development Agency (CanNor) was one of the sponsors of the event and will be the guest of honor.
CDETNO takes this opportunity to recognize and honor Pierre LePage, Laureate 2005, for excellence in the category of "tourism".
The goal of the evening is to meet, in addition to our territorial elected, business representatives of the NWT. This event provides an opportunity to enlarge their networks. Also, at this reception we will recognize the contribution of Francophone businesses to the economy of the NWT. In addition, the reception will provide an opportunity for these businesses to connect to the greater community.
DATE: Thursday, November 26th, 2009 at 5:00 pm
LOCATION:Niko's Market, 480 Range Lake Road, Yellowknife

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Points of View: Capturing the 19th Century in Photographs

Points of View: Capturing the 19th Century in Photographs

The British Library has a spectacular online and physical exhibit of photographs of the 1800s made available here.  The website has a minute-long video introduction to the exhibit that starts upon arriving at the homepage. Visitors can "view exhibition online" by clicking on the entitled link near the bottom of the page.  The exhibition is divided into eight themes of 19th-century life, such as "Art", "Portraits", "Science", and "Travel".  The "Learning" link on the far right hand side of any page, leads to the ten workshops available to students age seven to secondary and higher education, as well as further education and ESOL.  Pre-visit and post-visit activities are included in the details of each workshop, so the students can get the most out of the activities.  A "Points of View Blog" about the exhibit can be found in the link on the right hand side of the video introduction.  One entry compares photographs of buildings from the 1800s and now.  Another entry further down in the blog has video demonstrations of two different photographic processes. [KMG]

>From The Scout Report, Copyright Internet Scout 1994-2009.
http://scout.wisc.edu/

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Terrorism that's personal (12 images) [EDITOR'S NOTE: GRAPHIC CONTENT]

EDITOR'S NOTE: GRAPHIC CONTENT

Text by Jim Verhulst, Times' Perspective editor | Photos by Emilio
Morenatti, Associated Press

We typically think of terrorism as a political act.

[excerpt]

http://blogs.tampabay.com/photo/2009/11/terrorism-thats-personal.html

But sometimes it's very personal. It wasn't a government or a guerrilla
insurgency that threw acid on this woman's face in Pakistan. It was a
young man whom she had rejected for marriage. As the United States ponders
what to do in Afghanistan — and for that matter, in Pakistan — it is wise
to understand both the political and the personal, that the very ignorance
and illiteracy and misogyny that create the climate for these acid attacks
can and does bleed over into the political realm. Nicholas Kristof, the
New York Times op-ed columnist who traveled to Pakistan last year to write
about acid attacks, put it this way in an essay at the time: "I've been
investigating such acid attacks, which are commonly used to terrorize and
subjugate women and girls in a swath of Asia from Afghanistan through
Cambodia (men are almost never attacked with acid). Because women usually
don't matter in this part of the world, their attackers are rarely
prosecuted and acid sales are usually not controlled. It's a kind of
terrorism that becomes accepted as part of the background noise in the
region. ...

"Bangladesh has imposed controls on acid sales to curb such attacks, but
otherwise it is fairly easy in Asia to walk into a shop and buy sulfuric
or hydrochloric acid suitable for destroying a human face. Acid attacks
and wife burnings are common in parts of Asia because the victims are the
most voiceless in these societies: They are poor and female. The first
step is simply for the world to take note, to give voice to these women."
Since 1994, a Pakistani activist who founded the Progressive Women's
Association (www.pwaisbd.org) to help such women "has documented 7,800
cases of women who were deliberately burned, scalded or subjected to acid
attacks, just in the Islamabad area. In only 2 percent of those cases was
anyone convicted."

The geopolitical question is already hard enough: Should the United States
commit more troops to Afghanistan and for what specific purpose? As
American policymakers mull the options, here is a frame of reference that
puts the tough choices in even starker relief: Are acid attacks a sign of
just how little the United States can do to solve intractable problems
there — therefore, we should pull out? Or having declared war on
terrorism, must the United States stay out of moral duty, to try to
protect women such as these — and the schoolgirls whom the Taliban in
Afghanistan sprayed with acid simply for going to class — who have
suffered a very personal terrorist attack? We offer a reading file of two
smart essays that come to differing conclusions.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

My Lai Photographer Ron Haeberle Exposed a Vietnam Massacre 40 Years Ago Today in The Plain Dealer

My Lai Photographer Ron Haeberle Exposed a Vietnam Massacre 40 Years Ago Today in The Plain Dealer

by Evelyn Theiss

Forty years ago today, black-and-white photographs of slaughtered women, children and old men in a Vietnamese village shocked the world -- or that portion of the world willing to believe American soldiers could gun down unarmed peasants and leave them to die in streets and ditches.

The Plain Dealer, in an international exclusive, was the first news outlet to publish the images of what infamously became known as the My Lai massacre, which had taken place on March 16, 1968.

"A clump of bodies," read the description on the front page of The Plain Dealer's Nov. 20, 1969, edition. At first some people were in denial about how these South Vietnamese civilians were killed, even after seeing the pictures.

Photographer remembers My Lai Massacre

http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/11/20-6

Friday, November 20, 2009

Nearly anything you want to know about digital photography

The dpBestflow website, your resource for nearly anything you want to know about digital photography. A quick look through the menus will make it apparent that there's a Master's Degree worth of information in the site. How the heck is anybody supposed to navigate this? Well, we have an answer for you. This page presents strategies for finding the information that's right for you.

100 years of great press photographs

 100 years of great press photographs

Click your way through the highlights of the Guardian and Observer's series on the greatest press photos from the last century. The series includes incredible reportage from the world's conflict zones…

Cleaning your DSLR Sensor: Tips and Advice

Back in the days when dinosaurs roamed the earth and photographers used totally mechanical cameras, it was common to have a camera serviced every few years. The springs in the shutter assembly had to be adjusted to keep shutter speeds accurate and various parts of the camera and lens could need lubrication. A CLA (clean, lubricate and adjust) was something that kept a camera in top condition.

Current cameras (and indeed most cameras made in the last few decades) really don't need a regular CLA. The shutters are electronically timed and in general no lubrication is required. Wiping off external dirt is about all the servicing that most film cameras ever needed. With digital SLRs the situation is slightly different since and dust or dirt on the sensor will be recorded in the same place on every image and despite automatic cleaning systems, you will eventually find dirt stuck to the sensor that shows up in your images.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

A very special thing on the web....

[All the items below are excerpts... please click on the links for more...]

He Took a Polaroid Every Day, Until the Day He Died

by Chris Higgins

Yesterday I came across a slightly mysterious website — a collection of Polaroids, one per day, from March 31, 1979 through October 25, 1997. There's no author listed, no contact info, and no other indication as to where these came from. So, naturally, I started looking through the photos. I was stunned by what I found.

In 1979 the photos start casually, with pictures of friends, picnics, dinners, and so on. Here's an example from April 23, 1979 (I believe the photographer of the series is the man in the left foreground in this picture):

April 23, 1979

[...]

Throughout early 1997, we start to see the photographer himself more and more often. Sometimes his face is obscured behind objects. Other times he's passed out on the couch. When he's shown with people, he isn't smiling. On May 2 1997, something bad has happened:

May 2, 1997

By May 4, 1997, it's clear that he has cancer:

May 4, 1997

Full set of photos here
http://photooftheday.hughcrawford.com/


Sunday, September 06, 2009

Hugh Crawford and Photo-of-the-Day on A Standardized Test

Remember this article about Jamie Livingston's Photo-of-the-Day in the Guardian last year. Well, now this article is being used in an English language standardized test in Spain.

[...]

Sunday, October 12, 2008

18 Years and 6,000 Photos Later: Jamie in the Times

12day2large Get the real paper edition of the Times today so you can see The City section story on page 4, The Days of His Life: 18 Years and 6,000 photos later, one man's chronicle of his times. It's big and lovely. The website doesn't do it justice. Here's an excerpt:

The narrative that unfolds between those two images tells the story not only of the friendships Mr. Livingston forged over the years but also the evolution of a city. It charts New York's progression from an era of urban decay and fiscal crisis to a place characterized by the economic recovery that had arrived by the time of Mr. Livingston's death, of melanoma, in 1997. This was especially true downtown, where he lived for much of the period covered in the photographs.

Before Mr. Livingston died, his friends Hugh Crawford and Betsy Reid promised they would not let the project die with him. To commemorate the 10th anniversary of their friend's death, they digitally photographed the Polaroids and reproduced them for an exhibition at Bard, in Annandale-on-Hudson, N.Y.

October 12, 2008 in Jamie Livingston | Permalink | Comments (2)

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Jamie Livingston in the New York Times City Section

Here's the article by David Shaftel which is on the City Visible page of The City section of the New York Times (October 12th, 2008): 

AS a senior at Bard College in 1979, Jamie Livingston acquired a Polaroid camera. After a few weeks, he noticed that he was taking about one picture a day, and shortly thereafter he decided to continue doing so.

The project, which quickly evolved into something of an obsession, began with a snapshot of Mindy Goldstein, Mr. Livingston's girlfriend at the time, along with another friend, both of them smiling at something outside the frame. It ended 18 years and more than 6,000 photos later with a self-portrait of the photographer on his deathbed on his 41st birthday.

The narrative that unfolds between those two images tells the story not only of the friendships Mr. Livingston forged over the years but also the evolution of a city. It charts New York's progression from an era of urban decay and fiscal crisis to a place characterized by the economic recovery that had arrived by the time of Mr. Livingston's death, of melanoma, in 1997. This was especially true downtown, where he lived for much of the period covered in the photographs.

Before Mr. Livingston died, his friends Hugh Crawford and Betsy Reid promised they would not let the project die with him. To commemorate the 10th anniversary of their friend's death, they digitally photographed the Polaroids and reproduced them for an exhibition at Bard, in Annandale-on-Hudson, N.Y.

Mr. Crawford also loaded the images onto a Web site (photooftheday.hughcrawford.com) so they could be experienced in their entirety.

As the cityscape has changed, many of the pictures have accrued meaning. "They often don't mean anything by themselves," Mr. Crawford said. "But when you put them all together, they take on a life of their own."

Ms. Reid, who met Mr. Livingston in 1985, cited other benefits of the collection. "When I look at a picture that I was involved in or know about," she said, "you're just sent right back in time and you just remember everything about that day."

October 11, 2008 in Jamie Livingston | Permalink | Comments (0)

For More Information About Jamie Livingston and Photo-of-the-Day

For those of you who want MORE information about Jamie Livingston and his life-long photo-of-the-day project here's what you can do:

--For information, interviews, and inquiries you can email Hugh Crawford and Betsy Reid: hugh(at)hughcrawford(dot)com and betsy.reid(at)earthlink(dot)net

--You can view all of Jamie Livingston's polaroids at photooftheday.hughcrawford.com

--To see what the exhibition of Jamie Livingston's Photo-of-the-Day project looked like at Bard College in October 2007, you can go to Hugh's website: hughcrawford.com

--Scroll down on this page for many articles that have appeared about Jamie Livingston on OTBKB and elsewhere.

--Last but not least: Google "Jamie Livingston" and see everything about him on various blogs and websites around the world. Lately there's been quite a lot of interest in China.

October 11, 2008 in Jamie Livingston | Permalink | Comments (0)

[...]



Digital Camera Photographer of the Year 2009: Black and White - editor's choice shortlist

Photographer of the Year 2009: Black and White

In the space of 20 weeks, the world's biggest photo contests, Digital Camera magazine's Photographer of the Year, received a massive 101,000 online entries from 126 countries.The overall £10,000 prize winner will be announced at the exhibition of winning and commended entries, taking place at Mall Galleries, London. The exhibit will be open to the public from the 9th – 13th December. Here are 30 of the shortlisted entries - in alphabetical order - in the Black and White category. A full list of the shortlisted entries across all 10 categories can be seen now at PhotoRadar.com

http://go.telegraph.co.uk/?id=296X678&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.photoradar.com%2Fnews%2Fstory%2Fdigital-camera-photographer-of-the-year-shortlist-announced

The Minister - Alex Attard, Malta

Digital Camera Photographer of the Year 2009: Black and White - editor's choice shortlist

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culturepicturegalleries/6562697/Digital-Camera-Photographer-of-the-Year-2009-Black-and-White---editors-choice-shortlist.html

Friday, November 13, 2009

Piwigo 2.0 (Mac & PC) photo gallery software package

Piwigo 2.0
http://piwigo.org/

Out of the vast universe of available photo gallery software packages, Piwigo distinguishes itself with a snappy user interface and a set of customizable features. Foremost among these features is a category "tree" which lets users create photo categories that expand and flatten the tree structure to view all the photos. Visitors can also set up user permissions and also create rating tabs for each photo, or groups of photos. This version is compatible with computers running Mac OS 10.3 or newer or Windows 95 and newer.

Piwigo is a photo gallery software for the web that comes with powerful features to publish and manage your collection of pictures.

Started in 2002, the project is now supported by an active community of users and developers. It supports numerous galleries of all sizes all over the world, from an individual ten-photos party to the images stock of an agency. This scalability is supported by smart browsing capabilities based on categories, tags and chronological search. Various extensions make Piwigo even more scalable and customizable to suit your own needs and desires.

Piwigo is both web and photo standard compliant. And, icing on the cake, it is free and opensource.

Via The Scout Report, Copyright Internet Scout 1994-2009.
http://scout.wisc.edu/

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

FYI How to Stop Using Stock Photos & Boycott the Stock Photo Industry

How to Stop Using Stock Photos & Boycott the Stock Photo Industry

http://extortionletterinfo.com/boycott.htm

[excerpt]

By Matthew S. Chan, Last updated:  April 14, 2009

Because of my personal distaste and dismay of the Stock Photo industry which started with the Getty Images Extortion Demand Letter, I have taken steps to personally boycott the Stock Photo Industry and advocate not using stock photos altogether.  The stock photo industry seems to be rapidly consolidating into two companies:  Getty Images and Corbis, as they buy their way into near-monopoly status with them setting outrageous rules, policy, and pricing.

This article will not give you all the information necessary to entirely eliminate the need for stock photos in every situation.  However, this article will give you some ideas and strategies to wean yourself and perhaps altogether eliminate your need for stock photos.  I firmly believe that if you put your intentions behind the idea, you can make huge strides towards eliminating the need for stock photos altogether.

The very first thing you need to think about is whatever media project you are working on is, do you truly need a photo at all?  Chances are that you are working on a website, book, magazine, brochure, news story, banner, or some other media project.  Alternatives to photos might be diagrams, cartoons, illustrations, and drawings that you or a graphic artist you hire can create.  Can you take your own photo to fit the need?

If you hire a graphic artist to create your own artwork, do not hire anyone in China or India where there is very little respect for intellectual property.  They may be inexpensive but you can never be assured that their work is original.  There is little recourse for their bad behavior because they are so far away.  I recommend hiring graphic artists from the U.S. because as a professional community, they have a greater respect for intellectual property than their Chinese or Indian counterparts.  They will think twice before using pirated material. 

I would avoid hiring any company that outsources their work to graphic artist worker bees.  In other words, I always want to deal and negotiate with a graphic artist professional themselves, not some agent or agency that farms out graphics art work.

If you do want to use and take your own photos, I highly recommend investing in a good digital camera so that you can begin taking your own photos.  I also recommend getting to know amateur hobbyist photographers who have access to good cameras and enjoy taking photos.  Very often, amateur photographers with good cameras are trying to find a way to justify the costs of their hobby.  By hiring them inexpensively, you can get some great looking photos but also help the amateur photographer pay for his hobby.  Make sure they understand that you are they are working for hire and that you will have full ownership and rights to the photos.

Professional photographers can be expensive depending on what you want and who you use.  For these folks, I recommend bartering with them for exchange of services if you have talents in your profession.  I find many professional photographers finicky.  They will sometimes not give you full ownership or rights of the photo even though you paid them to take a photo.  They are quite protective and their thinking is aligned to many in the stock photo industry.  Admittedly, this is a broad generalization and based only on my experience.  I am simply not optimistic that you will get good value from a professional photographer but it certainly does not hurt to try and negotiate with them.



Sunday, November 08, 2009

Captured Photo Collection » Photographer Collection: David Guttenfelder in Afghanistan Photos

Captured Photo Collection » Photographer Collection: David Guttenfelder in Afghanistan Photos

Photographer Collection: David Guttenfelder in Afghanistan
October 30th, 2009

For the past seven years, David Guttenfelder has witnessed and documented the changing landscape of Afghanistan. Although mostly embedded with coalition troops, he has also covered the presidential elections, bodybuilders in Kabul, the state of Afghan prisons and daily life in the country. Guttenfelder is the chief Asia photographer for The Associated Press and over the past seven years has offered the general public a close-up, intimate look at the lives of troops fighting in the mountains and remote regions of Afghanistan.

FYI Re.: http://www.photoshelter.com/

Just in case you did not know of...  http://www.photoshelter.com/

"... PhotoShelter is the leader in photography websites, photo sales and archiving tools.
We're here to help photographers find success online...."
http://www.photoshelter.com/tour

"...Over 48,000 photographers worldwide use PhotoShelter to power their success online, with customizable website templates, searchable galleries, e-commerce capabilities, and bulletproof image storage. Photographers can create a professional PhotoShelter website in under five minutes, or customize PhotoShelter to power their existing website. A true solution designed to make the business of photography easier to manage - PhotoShelter offers security, global accessibility, and advanced marketing tools so photographers can make their images work harder for them...."

Print, Rights-Managed and Royalty Free Agreement

Click on one of the following to view the appropriate license between you and the photographer/copyright holder:
http://www.photoshelter.com/support/license


---

GEORGE LESSARD
Information, Communications and Media Specialist
Spécialiste en l'information, communications et  medias
451 Norseman Dr.
Yellowknife, Northwest Territories
X1A 2J1, Canada

Yellowknife Land Line # (867) 873-2662
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Thursday, November 05, 2009

Labour photo of the year - International Metalworkers’ Federation

Labour photo of the year - International Metalworkers’ Federation

Photojournalist relives Iran hostage crisis in exhibit

CBC News - Art & Design - Photojournalist relives Iran hostage crisis in exhibit

[excerpt]

Thirty years ago, Canadian Press photographer Peter Bregg eagerly flew to Iran to cover the capture of 66 hostages at the American Embassy in Tehran. As the weeks turned into months, Bregg and Canadian Press reporter Doug Long were among the only western journalists who remained in the country to report on the drama.

To mark the 30th anniversary of the start of the hostage-taking, Bregg is hosting a photo exhibit in Toronto showcasing his work in Iran and talking about his near-death experiences. [...]

Tuesday, November 03, 2009

Oct 31 Yellowknife Photo Tour Results

Yellowknife Photo Tour Results

On Oct 31 Samantha Chrysanthou and I led a field workshop in Yellowknife NWT. We had six enthusiastic photographers who happily spent the day photographing everything from sunrise over Slave Lake to light painting abandoned mining equipment. Below are six shots from some of the participating photographers. More images to follow once all the particapants process their images. Comments appreciated!

http://darwinwiggett.wordpress.com/2009/11/02/yellowknife-photo-outing/

This entry was posted on November 2, 2009 at 8:06 PM and is filed under Workshops with tags , . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Monday, November 02, 2009

Labour Photo of the Year 2009 - and the winner is ... "Manual labour"


Manual labour, originally uploaded by K M Asad.

"A Bangladeshi boy works in a shipbuilding factory in down town. These factories employ young boys as apprentices without pay for the first few years. They work in extreme conditions without safety tools like gloves, goggles, and other protective gears. In exchange, they learn the skills of the trade. But this costs them loss of health and education. In Bangladeshi child work lad is under 18th years child don't work in any work site. But no body else to see them and no security in their life. "

Nearly twice as many photos were submitted this year as last year (189 vs 118) and 3,203 of you voted to choose a winner from a shortlist of five great photos.

Here is the photo you selected by a wide margin to be the Labour Photo of the Year:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/kmasad/3951175816/

Please feel free to congratulate the winner. You can use the comment feature on Flickr to do so (but you must sign up to Flickr first to do so).

If you wish to use this photo (or any on the shortlist) on your union website or magazine, please make sure to get the permission of the photographer.

I'd like to congratulate the winner, the four runners-up (you can still see their photos on http://www.labourstart.org/lpoty) and all those who submitted photos.
I also want to thank Derek Blackadder for coordinating this effort, and the three judges -- all outstanding photographers themselves -- Mac Urata, David Bacon and Gretchen Donart.

I encourage all of you who take photos, or have an interest in photos, to join the more than 500 trade unionists who are already part of the union photographers' group on Flickr, here:

http://www.flickr.com/groups/union/

Eric Lee

Arviat Nunavut photo book

Photos from the time I worked in the Arctic at Arviat, Nunavut, Canada

Around Old Town Yellowkife Photo Book

Test post of this embedding

Old Town Yellowknife

http://issuu.com/mediamentor/docs/around_old_town_yellowknife