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Displaying items by tag: 2011 Fall Issue

Panasonic Unveils Lumix FZ150 Superzoom Compact

23 October 2011
Published in Digital Cameras

Key features of Panasonic’s new Lumix DMC-FZ150 consumer camera include full-HD video, 24x optical zoom and a 25mm ultra-wide-angle lens.

With a 12.1-megapixel MOS sensor, the FZ150 has been upgraded from the previous FZ47 to shoot full 1920 x 1080, 60p HD video. While filming, users can also adjust the zoom and take stills.

Additionally, the FZ150 nano-surface coating technology helps minimize light reflection that causes ghost and flare. The unit also includes 3-D photo mode, which takes 20 panning shots and then selects the two most suitable images — one for the right eye and one for the left — to form a composite 3-D image...

Nikon Gives Face-lift to Coolpix Line with P7100

23 October 2011
Published in Digital Cameras

Adding a few perks for the advanced consumer, Nikon’s flagship Coolpix P7100 camera has undergone some functionality improvements since its predecessor, the P7100, came out last summer.

With the P7100, Nikon retained the same 10.1-megapixel sensor, but added a second click-wheel to the front of the camera body for adjustments. Depending on what mode you’re in, the wheel’s function will change. Example: In manual mode, the secondary wheel controls the aperture, while the primary wheel controls the shutter speed...

Sony Transposes Translucent Mirrors to High-End SLRs

23 October 2011
Published in Digital Cameras

With three successful translucent mirror-equipped cameras already on the market, Sony has infused this new technology to two of its higher-end alpha models — the SLT-A77 (α77) and SLT-A65 (α65).

Both units, which are capable of 24.3-megapixel resolution, house an inaugural XGA OLED Tru-Finder viewfinder that, unlike optical viewfinders, allows users to preview the effects of adjusting exposure, white balance and...

Fall 2011 Cover

22 October 2011
Published in About Our Cover

On the cover: A holy man sits in a doorway during India's Kumbh Mela pilgrimage.

© Steve McCurry

Pause for Reflection

22 October 2011
Published in Shot of the Week

Exactly 10 years after the first plane hit, New York City police officer Danny Shea, a veteran of the Afghanistan war, snapped a salute at the corner of the reflecting pool that stands on the footprint of what was the North Tower. Just as he was a decade ago, photojournalist David Handschuh was there to share the moment with the world.

Handschuh was struck by the angular geometry of the scene, with the flag-draped One World Trade Center rising in the background. It summed up the sense of grief, solemnity and renewal that infused the event...

Steve McCurry: Perfecting the Art of Observation

22 October 2011
Published in Photojournalism

From his iconic street portraits to his final roll of Kodachrome, globetrotting photojournalist McCurry is a master at finding personal connections with his subjects

Street portraits are one of McCurry's specialties. Most photojournalists tend to be somewhat removed from their subjects, but McCurry has perfected the intimate, close-up portrait in documentary photography.

His most famous portrait is the iconic "Afghan Girl," the now-ubiquitous image taken in 1984 during the Soviet occupation, showing an Afghan child with penetrating, pale eyes. In this portrait, we see the girl face to face....

Ketchum Exhibiting at Connecticut's Mansfield Freeman Center

22 October 2011
Published in People in the Industry

California-based photographer Robert Glenn Ketchum is exhibiting his latest work at Connecticut's Mansfield Freeman Center for East Asian Studies through Dec. 9.

The installment, called "Metamorphosis: The Collaboration Between Photographer Robert Glenn Ketchum and...

John Keatley for the PDN Faces and the Px3 Contests

22 October 2011
Published in People in the Industry

Seattle editorial-portrait photographer John Keatley's portrait of PopCap Games co-founder John Vechey was selected this year in PDN Faces and the Prix de la Photographie Paris (Px3) photography contests. Keatley also was chosen to take the portrait used in Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz's new best-selling book, "Onward." Keatley helped...

James Balog: Acting Globally

21 October 2011
Published in Person of the Year

Over a three-decade career, James Balog has used his stunning, alarming images to educate the world about global climate change and its potentially disastrous effects if left unchecked.

James Balog strolls out to the deck of his Colorado mountain home and eases himself into a chair just in time to glimpse another glorious Rocky Mountain sunset.

"I just enjoy sitting down and chilling out and looking at the world," he says with a sigh. "I like to watch...

IN THE LOUPE: James Balog

21 October 2011
Published in In the Loupe

Office: Boulder, Colo..

Websites: jamesbalog.com and extremeicesurvey.org.

Staff: Currently three people (can vary widely).

Family life: Wife, Suzanne, and daughters Simone, 23, and Emily, 9, both of whom, he says, already have "a pretty amazing knack for snapping photos".

Favorite equipment: Nikon cameras and lenses, especially the 24-70 f/2.8G ED AF-S zoom...

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