NATURE NOTES: A beginner’s guide to birding photography

NATURE NOTES: A beginner’s guide to birding photography
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Nature enthusiasts may find themselves interested in beginning wildlife photography but they don’t where to start. You might take photos of birds with your phone only to find out that they don’t live up to your expectations, often turning out grainy or blurred due to the distance. As a fellow newcomer to the world of wildlife photography, I can offer a few tips for those just starting out.

Selecting a camera and lens can be a daunting task. There are an abundance of cameras and lenses that are available to those interested in wildlife photography. Your budget can help to narrow down the options, and great photos can be taken on any budget!

Crunchyroll signs up Tiger Shroff to celebrate art of anime in India

Crunchyroll signs up Tiger Shroff to celebrate art of anime in India
imageTiger Shroff and Crunchyroll”>
Tiger Shroff and Crunchyroll

Crunchyroll has announced partnerships with Tiger Shroff.

The brand aims to celebrate the anime in India with this partnership.

This alliance marks a significant milestone for the brand, aimed at establishing a deeper and authentic connection with the young and engaged anime community in the country, the company stated.

With this collaboration, the brand creates a bridge between diverse audiences and cultures, fostering a sense of community and shared experience.

Partnering with Shroff will further elevate and evangelise the anime brand, reaching fans across the region – from metropolitan cities to smaller villages and in-between, it added.

Rahul Purini, president of Crunchyroll said, “We are excited to welcome Tiger Shroff to the Crunchyroll family. As deeply passionate fans, we all have a shared love and respect for anime – its characters, artistry, storylines and the profound connections it makes with audiences around the world.”

Shroff said, “Being an anime fan myself, I am honoured to work with Crunchyroll to grow the anime community in India.”

“Anime has the power to inspire, educate, and entertain, and together with Crunchyroll, I look forward to bringing the fandom closer to this vast and captivating world of possibilities and bolstering the anime culture in the country further,” he added.

Carlsberg Group selects dentsu’s iProspect as new media agency

With iProspect’s support, Carlsberg aims to establish an integrated media strategy and execute impactful campaigns that resonate with consumers, ensuring its brands remain relevant and influential across all the group’s markets, the company stated

  • Published On Jul 15, 2023 at 11:30 AM IST

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There is a different approach to work and to subjects now compared to when I started taking photographs in the 1940s.

In my time, you couldn’t leave wedding portraits to go and try new things. You did what you had to in order to make a living, and portraiture was the thing. I had to take photos of people that they would want to buy. I did not have the luxury of being able to experiment and be as playful as some of these artists.

Things are changing all the time and with every generation new things are coming. I will always encourage young photographers to try their own ideas and to make progress. This generation has so much to say.


Leonce Raphael Agbodjelou
b. 1965, Porto-Novo, Benin

Egungun series, 2011-12, printed 2023

Africans have different ways of portraying their culture and art. Right across Africa, especially west Africa, in the Congo and Benin, where this photographer comes from, they wear these clothes to show when they are happy or celebrating. They design shoes to go with their dresses and mask their faces. I feel proud when I see this. The photographer’s work is to record or document. We have very little documentation about our ways of life and our worship. If we had people like these artists capturing what they saw, we would have diverse documentation of all kinds of religions.


Ruth Ginika Ossai
b. 1991, Onitsha and Nsukka, Nigeria

Student nurses Alfrah, Adabesi, Odah, Uzoma, Abor and Aniagolum. Onitsha, Anambra state, Nigeria, 2018
Student nurses Alfrah, Adabesi, Odah, Uzoma, Abor and Aniagolum. Onitsha, Anambra state, Nigeria, 2018

There is an art and a skill to taking photographs of groups. You have to arrange it so that all of their faces appear well enough to make them buy copies. If there are 100 people, you are aiming to get 90 per cent to buy copies — if not all of them. But people are always proud to show their uniforms. They can show the photograph to people and say, “Look at me when I was a nurse” or “This is my dad in the classroom, teaching”. The photograph allows future storytelling.

I’ve only got one group of nurses under training in my whole archive. There was a photographer in Accra who used to go to the nursing training college, so he dominated there, but I had a few friends at the college, and my sister was a nurse, so they came to be photographed. I was so happy that they took the taxi and came to my studio.


Sabelo Mlangeni
b. 1980, Driefontein, South Africa

Talent and his Girlfriends, 2009. From the Country Girl series
Talent and his Girlfriends, 2009. From the Country Girl series

This picture shows the love of a baby. Everyone is delighted. My favourite photographic subjects are babies and large groups. Sometimes the baby will start crying and nothing will stop it, but you have to have patience. When I started out, I used roll film and a miniature camera to capture babies, because it was faster and you can take a lot more pictures. That’s how I got the image of the baby on all fours. When I see babies like this, I remember taking those photographs.


Edson Chagas
b. 1977, Luanda, Angola

Tipo Passe series, 2014
Tipo Passe series, 2014

I have dreams about these photographs. The clothes show that we are all human beings, but the masks show different things: those who are sad, those who are happy; when you are laughing, when you open your eyes. They are each like characters. These African masks are vital things, powerful objects and part of a living tradition.


Andrew Esiebo
b. 1978, Lagos, Nigeria

Mutations, 2015-22
Mutations, 2015-22

I come from an oil-producing country, but I’ve never seen an oil rig before. At first, this looks like a painting, but it’s so real: the colours are not artificial and you can see activity on all the various stages. In the background, you can see the oil-processing stations and the tanks where the oil is formed.


Mário Macilau
b. 1984, Maputo, Mozambique

Breaking News, 2015. From the series The Profit Corner
Breaking News, 2015. From the series The Profit Corner

In Ghana, where the rubbish is worse than what we see in this photograph of Maputo in Mozambique, people collect parts of these machines to recycle them. They learn to excavate the useful parts from the piles of discarded items and they make a living this way. People even use them to make art.

I like Mário Macilau’s composition here, with the cloud of smoke, the television and the rubbish in the front. In the midst of all the litter, it’s as if there are people watching the television.


Atong Atem
b. 1994, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

Zack and Adella, 2015, printed 2023. From the Studio Series
Zack and Adella, 2015, printed 2023. From the Studio Series

This is the style of photography that I worked in and still like best: arranging relatives or friends and making them feel relaxed, at home. In 1949, I had a studio in Accra, and people would come just after weddings or buying new clothes. I had a hotel and a nightclub not very far from me and, as my studio was open day and night, people would come and have their portraits taken after going out. Here Atong Atem has used her friends, all second-generation African immigrants living in Australia, as the models.

Some photographers like to decorate their studios, as Atem has here. Many well-known francophone studios use props because it encourages people to come to them. I had just one or two props; I could lend you a tie. But I like it to be plain to portray you and your fashion — what you feel proud of before you come to the studio. You come to show yourself.


Kudzanai Chiurai
b. 1981, Harare, Zimbabwe

We Live in Silence IV, 2017. Printed 2023
We Live in Silence IV, 2017. Printed 2023

When I worked, I didn’t have the luxury of dressing a model or building up a stage. Everything was done with the bare minimum. So the chance to clothe a model with expensive clothes, and use different styles and backgrounds, as Kudzanai Chiurai has here, would have been completely out of my line of work. With all the help I got from Drum magazine, which helped me get my feet firmly on the ground when I moved from Accra to London, I didn’t get that far. Here, we get the means to show the world that an African can also wear these styles.

“A World in Common: Contemporary African Photography” is on show at Tate Modern, London, until January 14 2024

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Come and Learn During Reservation Visits, by Travel Writers

Come and Learn During Reservation Visits, by Travel Writers

By Victor Block

The man scowled menacingly as he danced toward members of the crowd who watched him in fascination. Feathers adorned his headdress, and he clutched something that looked like a club in his right hand. Then, prancing just a few feet from the onlookers, he broke into a grin, took several more steps in time to the accompanying drumbeats and sashayed away.

The spectators viewing this colorful spectacle were reliving an ages-old American ritual, one that predates the arrival of the first European travelers to these shores. They were visitors at a Native American reservation watching a modern-day warrior re-create the moves — and moods — of his forebears.

Visits to Native American sanctuaries are a popular way to delve into a chapter of the nation’s past that is part tragic, part heroic and at all times full of fascination and surprises. For example, did you know that more than half of the crops grown on American farms today come from plants that were developed and domesticated by Native Americans? That many highways throughout the country were built over native trading routes? Or that the names of 24 states have Native American origins?

The U.S. government officially recognizes 574 tribes. While many of their members reside outside of designated reservations, those who remain on their ancestral lands live in ways resembling how their ancestors did, and some invite guests to learn about their history, lifestyle and culture.

In return, they ask only that those who come follow some basic rules of courtesy. Ask permission before taking photos or videos. Be respectful of their customs and practices. Remember that you are a guest, so act as you would like visitors to your home to behave.

The first step is to select a reservation to visit. Do you want to stay close to home or travel farther? A wide variety of settings, scenery and things to see and do await you.

Here’s a brief list that provides an introduction to a few of the available choices. Be sure to check in advance to make sure the destination you’d like to visit is open to guests at this time, what health or other restrictions might apply, and what advance booking requirements are necessary.

The Navajo Nation is the largest Native American reservation in the country, spanning an area in Arizona, New Mexico and Utah slightly bigger than West Virginia. It encompasses a number of natural attractions that include Monument Valley, Antelope Canyon and Horseshoe Bend and is known for its stunning red rock formations, ancient petroglyphs and dinosaur tracks. Guests can observe tribal dances, powwows and other ceremonies.

The Standing Rock Sioux Reservation also covers a big area along the border of North and South Dakota. It is home to a number of old burial mounds, rock art and the monument for which it’s named, a natural formation that resembles a mother and child. Chief Sitting Bull, the leader known for defeating Gen. George Custer at the Battle of Little Bighorn, is buried at Fort Yates.

Next door in Montana, the Blackfeet Reservation also is rich in natural beauty, including Glacier National Park, which lies within its borders. Several historic sites and cultural centers offer glimpses into aspects of native culture.

Between 1830 and 1850, the U.S. government forcibly displaced some 60,000 Native Americans from their ancestral homelands in the Southeast to areas west of the Mississippi. Descendants of some of those people who followed the “Trail of Tears” now live in Cherokee Nation.

They cling proudly to their long-established way of life, which is on display at a the reconstructed Diligwa Village (circa 1710), 19th century Rural Village and a moving and meaningful Trail of Tears exhibit.

A very different experience awaits at the Taos Pueblo, one of 19 such complexes dotted around northern New Mexico. That community of earthen structures is believed to be the oldest continuously inhabited place in the country, and life there goes on much as it has for some 2,000 years.

The pueblo’s residents continue to cling to the old ways in the original apartments. They make do without electricity or running water and bake bread in outdoor beehive-shaped ovens called hornos. Some dwellings double as shops selling handmade jewelry and paintings by native artists.

Elsewhere a very different culture is explored at the Big Cypress Reservation in Florida’s Everglades. Native American refugees from northern wars and the encroachment of European colonists migrated into Spanish Florida in the 18th century. Here they established a new culture called “Seminole,” adapted from Spanish for “wild” or “runaway.”

This story is told at a museum that holds more than 180,000 artifacts and archival items. Strolls over a mile-long boardwalk pass through a cypress wetland and lead to a Clan Pavilion, ceremonial grounds, hunting camp and Seminole Village, where artists demonstrate traditional arts and crafts.

If you’d like to explore this fascinating facet of American history, you can begin by checking out lists of tribes located around the country. Then contact those in which you have an interest to see if they welcome visitors. Two lists that might be helpful are available from the Bureau of Indian Affairs (www.bia.gov) and www.legendsofamerica.com/na-tribelist.

WHEN YOU GO

www.discovernavajo.com

www.standingrock.org

www.blackfeetnation.com

www.visitcherokee.com

www.taospueblo.com

www.semtribe.com

A Native American in full regalia dances at a powwow. Photo courtesy of RightFramePhotoVideos/Dreamstime.com.

A Native American in full regalia dances at a powwow. Photo courtesy of RightFramePhotoVideos/Dreamstime.com.
. Taos Pueblo in New Mexico has been the home of Pueblo people for some 2,000 years. Photo courtesy of Victor Block.

. Taos Pueblo in New Mexico has been the home of Pueblo people for some 2,000 years. Photo courtesy of Victor Block.
Residents of Taos Pueblo in New Mexico bake their bread in hornos just like their ancestors did. Photo courtesy of Victor Block.

Residents of Taos Pueblo in New Mexico bake their bread in hornos just like their ancestors did. Photo courtesy of Victor Block.

Victor Block is a freelance writer. To read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

Photo credit: at Unsplash

Wrexham University: Photography project celebrates power of storytelling

Wrexham University: Photography project celebrates power of storytelling

Deeside.com > News

Posted: Sat 15th Jul 2023

The inspirational stories of individuals who have demonstrated immense fortitude and resilience are the subject of a special project by a Photography and Film student at Prifysgol Wrecsam/Wrexham University. ‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

Katie McCormick, a final year student at the university, has captured portraits – and the emotionally charged stories – of people, who have shown courage in the face of adversity, as part of her final major degree project. ‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

  ‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

From secondary breast cancer patient turned campaigner, Lisa Jones; community first aider, Bethan Jones; to Lee Small – a man who has previously been awarded the title of World’s Strongest Disabled Man, Britain’s Strongest Disabled Man twice, the European Championship and a multitude of British powerlifting competitions – they are just some of the individuals who have featured as part of Katie’s project. ‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

University Chancellor, Colin Jackson CBE was also one of Katie’s subjects for the project – and her portrait of Mr Jackson has seen her land the title of Midlands Regional Photographer of the Year with the British Institute of Professional Photography. ‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

Speaking after discovering her award success, Katie said: “Being able to sit down and interview these incredible people, who not only shared their personal stories with me but also allowed me capture their portraits was an absolute joy and a privilege. From start to finish, it’s been wonderful to work on and a truly special way to round off three wonderful years at the university. ‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

“For me this project was all about the power of storytelling. I know the old saying is ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’ but actually – and maybe I shouldn’t be saying this as a photographer – understanding a person’s journey definitely makes you view their image in a different way, you see them in an even more powerful light, if that’s possible. ‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

“For each individual that I captured, to go alongside their portrait, I created a mini magazine, which detailed their story and the journey, in which they’ve been on. It’s been the most beautiful work I’ve ever produced. ‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

“I’m extremely thankful to all of the fantastic men and women, who have trusted me with their stories by agreeing to be a part of this project. ‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

“It also feels amazing to have had this work recognised by the British Institute of Professional Photography.” ‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

Katie’s work as part of this project was exhibited at the recent ‘Overture’ exhibition, which featured the works of the university’s final-year Art and Design students. ‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

Stephen King, Programme Leader for Photography and Film, added: “I am enormously proud of Katie for this truly engaging and compelling piece of work. She has given her all to this, so it’s wonderful that she has been recognised by the British Institute of Professional Photography – an organisation with real historical and international industry significance, especially for a project that focuses upon community. ‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

“I’d also like to take this opportunity to congratulate all of our fantastic final-year students for their dedication and effort in making this show happen. The huge success of the ‘Overture’ exhibition was a culmination of everything they’ve learned over the past three years informing and enabling their individual aspirations as graduates, each and every student put so much into it and it definitely showed.” ‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

Last year Katie was also named the winner of Studio Portrait Photographer of the Year Award by The British Institute of Professional Photography, as well as achieving first and second place with the Accredited Professional Newborn Photographer’s International’s Fall 2022 Competition. ‌​‌‌‌​‌‌‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​‍‌​‌‌‌​‌​

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  • Museum sets annual photography contest

    Museum sets annual photography contest

    The Plains Indians and Pioneers Museum’s 40th annual photography competition will begin taking submissions Aug. 1.

    The theme this year is “Capturing Inspiring Moments,” with eight categories; Scenic, Landscape, Portrait, Still Life, Floral, Animal, Insect and Black and White. Each category will have first, second and third place winners. First place prize is $50, second gets $25, third gets $15 and the theme award is $100, best of show award is $150 and People’s Choice award is the People’s Choice ribbon.

    Entry fees are $10 per entry or $25 for three. Anyone can enter as long as they fill out the entry form, Theme Award submissions must be marked as such, and anyone under 18 must have a guardian’s signature on their entry form. Previous photography competition winning photographs are not eligible. Pictures turned in can either be 8×10 or 8×12 with a white 11×14 mat. The museum will sell mats for people who need them.

    Those who wish to sell their photo will be able to put a price on the entry form, the museum gets a 30 percent commission for anything sold as part of the exhibit.

    Entries must be turned in by 5 p.m. on Aug/ 29 with the judging on Sept. 2The show opens to the public Sept. 5 and closes Oct. 21 when awards will be presented at 2:30 p.m. during the winners reception, which runs from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. All images will have to be removed from the gallery after the reception.

    Entry forms are available at the museum and on the museum’s website.