by edna yel.
by edna yel.
(via bradleyspitzer)
(via photojojo)
My favorite photo of me, by Emily Hunt
(Source: emilyhunt)
(Source: 1000scientists)
“If I only scrape a living, at least it’s a living worth scraping. If there’s no future in it, at least it’s a present worth remembering. For fires of happiness and waves of gratitude, for everything that brought us to that point on earth, at that moment in time, to do something worth remembering with a photograph or a scar. I feel genuinely lucky, to hand on heart, to say I love doing what I do. And though I may never be a rich man, if I live long enough I’ll certainly have a tale or two for the nephews, and I dig the thought of that.”
DARK SIDE OF THE LENS (by Astray Films)
(Source: mollymorgan, via elleeffect)
Distinguished sociologist Erving Goffman noted that women in photographs are often portrayed in compromising or submissive situations such as having the head turned upwards to expose the neck or in a contorted stances often with light self-touching. Such poses invite the gaze of the viewer and make the subject of the photograph seem vulnerable and exposed to sexualization.
this is interesting and I love it.
(via voguelovesme)




