Nic’s blog
I write about building businesses, failing and building a life, not a legacy.
G8 Summit
You know that feeling when you find R20 in the pocket of a pair of jeans you haven't worn for months? That's what I had today, except my feeling was about photographs. I went to the G8 Summit last year in Scotland. I did some freelance work and had a bit of a riot filled protesting holiday, it was grand. I thought that I had developed all the film I used (I like to use film when I have the chance). I was wrong, there were about 5 films left that I hadn't thought about in over a year. So today I took them in to be developed and below is one of the photos that I took and have edited. More to come
TechAttack #6 - Google's Picasa Web Albums
I have recently been viewing alot of my photos through Google's Picasa. This program is great and adds photo's to itself by searching your hard drive for the photos. This is all well and good and I love making use of Picasa and have in the past. But for Picasa to read your photos they need to exist somewhere on your hard drive. This is where my concern kicks in. I have many, many photos that span many trips, jobs, times and places in my life. I don't want to lose any of the photos to a corrupt hard drive, lightning or an external hard drive melt down.So I was viewing some photos today through Picasa when I noticed the "web albums" option on Picasa. The web album allows you to upload folders of photos to your own personal Picasa page where you can store, view and if you want share your photos with others.I am personally not interested at the moment in sharing my photos with the world. I am merely looking for a third backup of photos that I really, really don't want to lose. Very useful tool I think.
The Eye of the phone
This is a photo that i recently recovered off my phone. I had forgotten that I even took it at the time. This is the veiw from the London Eye through my phone. I am pretty impressed with the quality and the fact that my phone can do multiple shots!There is a huge debate around the value of camera phones and the way in which they will soon be changing the way we photojournalists veiw our profession. But thats another debate that will be told at another time.
Wimpy Fame
My little cousing is pretty famous and he's barely even 2. He is the wimpy baby in the new wimpy ad on T.V. So i thought that i would photograph him, he loves the camera and hates the attention. Go figure.
Citizen Journalism in Cape Town
My friend and fellow blogger Jason posted about what seemed to be riot in Beirut or Afghanistan of late. Alas this was not the case, the pictures seen were taken in Cape Town. The photos were taken by a Rhodes graduate Millisa bongela and they are great works for someone not trained as photographer.Here is one of the photos:I would like to congratulate Milli on her sterling work and applaud her courage! Well done, the world needs more journalists and citizens out there willing to take the chance to get the photo.
The Bang Bang Club
I read this book a while ago. It is definately one of the reasons that i took photography so seriously. However naive and idealistic this book made me feel, it still led me in to the area of journalism that I am in now. The book is about four photographs working in South africa in the time of Apartheid. Before power was to change hands in South africa many people expected civil war. Some claim that civil war never happened but these four men illustrated to the world that civil war was close.Here is one of the pictures that features in the book:
This is a photograph taken by Joao Silva, a member of the Bang Bang Club.It is photographs and situations such as this that lead me to question journalism and photojournalism. When does a journalist stop taking photographs and interject. I understand that Silva had no concievable chance of stopping this from happening, but in similar situations, when does one get involved? Just a question, rhetorical mostly, but a thought provoking one I hope.
Photo Essay: Riots in the streets
There are riots in the streets, believe it or not, over a cartoon that was drawn and published about the prophet Muhammad.Have a look at this Photo Essay from the streets of Beirut. What a shocking occurence all due to political agendas being pushed under the guise of fighting against a cartoon.Time Magazine has done well to cover this story in a photographic context.
Time Magazines Best Photos of 2005
Take a look at the Time Magazine photos of 2005. See if you agree with the choices, if there were better photos taken, let me know, send me a link, if not, marvel at being in the right place at the right time.Moving stuff.Time Magazines Photos of 2005
The Parlotones
The Grahamstown Festival in South Africa is attended by tens of thousands of people in its 1 week duration. The Parlotones were one of the main acts in 2004's You Magazine stage performances at the festival.