This blog is intended to showcase the landscape photography of photographers who have moved beyond the pretty picture and for whom photography is more than entertainment - photography that aims at being true, not at being beautiful because what is true is most often beautiful..
>>>> Email submission of photographs for publication are encouraged. Not all photographs will be published. First consideration will be given to those photographs which, whatever their visual merits, instigate thought and discussion about the medium of photography. Photo files should be around 200k @ 72dpi with a maximum height dimension of 750 pixels. Please include personal info and some words about any ideas regarding the medium that your photograph(s) addresses.
>>>> Comments, commentary and lively discussions are vigorously encouraged.
Reader Comments (3)
Yikes! I don't think I'm going to be using this apparatus if I've got something in my eye! Looks like it's going to make it worse! I am totally clueless as to how something like this came to be. I mean, how's the bloody thing work? And why these lurid colors? Who came up with this thing, and what was he thinking about? Thanks for sharing, Ana. This is down right creepy.
*g* Looks horrifying, doesn't it?
It actually sounds like a good concept (although I hope I never have to test it in practice!), the idea being that you can irrigate both your eyes in a hurry if you get spashed with something awful.
I think it's cute...in a sickly yellow, tortuous contraption kinda way! I like how the red caps are big and have a dangly chain so you can feel your way to opening them if you are somewhat blinded at the moment! Looks like it's in a forgotten, splattered upon corner of the studio.