TWiP 466: Modularity by Design - Divide and Conquer
Modularity by Design is the newest wave in high tech industrial design and in this episode we take a look at two early players implementing this methodology — Google and Craft Camera.
Modularity by Design is the newest wave in high tech industrial design and in this episode we take a look at two early players implementing this methodology — Google and Craft Camera.
This week we are exploring the streets of Bangkok, Thailand and local photographer Rammy Narula is your local guide for this adventure.
On this week’s episode, Robert & Bruce debrief from WPPI 2016 and talk with Sara France about building an associate photography team.
Peter Read Miller has been photographing athletes, events and the sporting life for more than 40 years. He is has worked as a staff and contract photographer for Sports Illustrated for more than 35 years. His images have appeared on over 100 Sports Illustrated covers.
Just a quick note to say THANK YOU and welcome to all of new students that have recently enrolled in the TWiP School. Just 2 days ago, we launched the school in conjunction with the 5DayDeal Video Creators Bundle (now underway), and I’m happy to report that so far over 1,000 new students have signed up! Wow.
The worlds of Virtual Reality and art have collided thanks to Google’s newest app called Tilt Brush. Plus DJI releases its most powerful Drone yet. VR, 360 video, and augmented reality are the topics of this weeks episode.
This week on Street Focus, German street photographer Andreas Ott gives us is top 10 street tips.
A review of the Brian Smith book – Sony A7/A7R From Snapshots to Greatshots
In this interview I sit down with my friend Giulio Sciorio to discuss his path from using the iPad, to Microsoft’s Surface. And back.
High-end camera manufacturer Leica is at it again. Heading down the “less is more” path with regard to features, or lack thereof in its newest camera introduction. Plus Sony is working on a contact lens that will let you do more than see.
My guest this week does not need an introduction. He has covered the world’s most important events for the past 30 years. His images have appeared on the covers of the most prestigious news magazines. Please enjoy an hour with Peter Turnley!
This week Kelly Ewell joins us to talk about the resource she is developing for photographers called The Second Shooter Society – a resource for growing wedding photographers to find support, education, and opportunities as interns, assistants, associates, and second shooters.
Jose Rosado is The Angry Millennial – a Philadelphia native, MBA and a self-taught photographer who describes himself as “pretty humble, since the only way I seem to know how to learn something is the hard way”.
ON1 software is set to release the first new camera raw processor in over a decade, with the introduction of their new Photo RAW processor. But can this new software compete with the established Camera RAW workflow pioneered by Adobe?
This week my guest co-host is my friend and former student Ken Lyons. We answer questions regarding photo workshops both from a student’s and instructor’s perspectives.
Adobe’s senior product manager on Lightroom’s mobile team joins me in this interview to discuss the mobile photography industry, and Lightroom Web fit into Adobe’s photography strategy.
A photographer cries foul after seeing a Calvin Klein ad. Plus a new startup wants to DSLR your iPhone with a new grip and could optical zoom be coming to the next iPhone?
Please enjoy my conversation with Montreal based photographer Patrick La Roque. We discuss how his street photography has changed his commercial work, working with a collective and many other things!
Spencer Lum from Ground-Glass.com joins us on this episode to talk about momentum selling and how wedding photographers can improve their sales process to attract and convert more prospects into paying clients.
In this episode of TWiP Talks I sit down with Out of Chicago and Out of New York founder Chris Smith.
GoPro focuses in on 360º video and away from from being solely a hardware manufacturer plus a first look at Nikon’s KeyMission 360º camera. Plus scientists discover a way to store 10 Terabytes of data in a smear of DNA.