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If you want to take a closer look at nature's wonders, you've come to the right place!Ian Granström, a photographer from Southern Finland, captures intimate wildlife images of foxes, birds, elk ...
Karl Blossfeldt (13 June 1865 – 9 December 1932) was a German photographer and sculptor. [1] He is best known for his close-up photographs of plants and living things, published in 1929 as Urformen der Kunst. [2] He was inspired, as was his father, by nature and the ways in which plants grow.
L. Thomas Laird; Tim Laman; Frans Lanting; Erika Larsen; John Launois; List of National Geographic cover stories; List of National Geographic cover stories (1959 and 1960s)
Thomas D. Mangelsen (born January 6, 1946) is an American nature and wildlife photographer and conservationist. He is most famous for his photography of wildlife in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, as he has lived inside the zone in Jackson, Wyoming, for over 40 years.
Art Wolfe has released more than 65 photo books and instructional videos of photographic techniques. The U.S. Postal Service has used Wolfe's photographs on two stamps. He is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Photographic Society and serves on the advisory boards for the Wildlife Conservation Society, Nature's Best Foundation, Bridges to Understanding, and is a Fellow of the International League ...
Sweet later changed careers and focused on nature photography. He is now best known for his fine art nature and floral images using digital technology to produce fine art ink-jet prints. His photographs are published internationally and represented by Getty Images. Sweet conducts photography workshops throughout the United States and Canada.
Later he graduated from Keio University, for two years he worked as an assistant to wildlife photographer Kojo Tanaka. In 1978, Hoshino enrolled at the University of Alaska Fairbanks where he studied wildlife management. [5] He was famous among the colleagues for his shots made from a very close position to the animals, including bears. [6]
The photograph is an extreme close-up of a woman's upturned face with glass droplets placed on her cheeks to imitate tears. [s 1] [s 4] Sleeping Woman: 1930 Man Ray Paris, France [s 2] See article Behind the Gare Saint-Lazare: 1932 Henri Cartier-Bresson: Paris, France [s 1] [s 2] [s 3]