Recent Tweets
Loading tweets...

12 guys and 1 girl writing about photography, camera gadgetry, and more...
The dpreview staff blog.
Loading tweets...
High-res
Amelia and the Animals by Robin Schwartz
“Robin’s daughter, Amelia displaying a comfort and special affinity with a wide variety of animals, companion animals and more exotic ones too. A body of work that describes a positive relationship between us and the non-human rather than the ubiquitous work that castigates ad nauseam the damage we are doing to our environment.”
High-res
Saturday Night Fever in the animal kingdom
High-res
This adorable squirrel using its tail as an umbrella, was photographed by Ray Yeager during a snowstorm in New Jersey
It has been featured in National Geographic Magazine’s ‘Your shot’ section.
by Ray Yeager
The ever-changing and fascinating work of Japanese photographer TommyOshima
The Telegraph has published The cutest animal pictures of 2011 with pictures that leave you smiling. Holding hands, laughing, cuddling.. they are all in there. Check it out.
High-res
Realistic wildlife illustrations by Romanian artist Cristina Penescu.
“I work primarily in acrylics and scratchboard, alternating between the two as needed to realize my visions. Scratchboard is a little known medium made up of a 1/8″ masonite panel that is covered with smooth white clay and coated with a fine layer of india ink. I use a sharp knife to scratch every single detail and hair by hand.”
via paranois
High-res
Once upon a time… II (by Dara Scully)
A fairytale kind of set up. Red leggings, gold hat, blue smoke and an elephant. The photographer Dara Scully is an elephant tamer. Her collection of mersmerising pictures are worth checking out on Flickr.
You can join her Facebook page for updates as well.
High-res
Perfect timing by photographer Levina de Ruijter from Amsterdam. Notice the backlighting on the fish. Beautiful.
Grey Heron (Ardea cinerea) (by Levina de Ruijter)
High-res
♫ Cheek to Cheek ♫
Dances with wolves | image by SheltieBoy
An interesting collection of prints including ’The Catsby twins’ and ‘Bunny Tea Party’
From Grand Ole Bestiary, a collection of ”faux-antique, anthropomorphic, mythological curios” from “bona fide photographs exposed with light on a digital enlarger and developed on Kodak archival photographic paper”.
Hang on tight while we grab the next page