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Vitor Shalom Photography

October 2, 2012 in Photography

Vitor Shalom Photography

With more than 10 years of experience, Vitor Shalom is the mastermind behind BLOW Mag and permanent photographer of the magazine. Based in São Paulo, he works for both national and international markets of advertisement and fashion.
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Bride in green

June 22, 2011 in Photography

Bride in green - DTK Foto

wedding photo with a beautiful bride in a sea of green plants

made by Dietmar Fister (DTK Foto)

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floating

March 10, 2011 in Photography

floating by Rebecca Cairns

One of my many self portraits.

by Rebecca Cairns

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Wonderland

November 17, 2010 in Photography

wonderland series

It is almost impossible to explain the project I am currently working on in a small comments box. So I just want to submit one small photo from the series of 37 images (so far). If you like it, everything is explained on my website. It is called ‘WONDERLAND’ and it is in memory of my mother who passed away in Nov 08. I created a storybook world, in which I create the entire scene – all the costumes, the props, the sets… finally recorded in the finished product of the photograph. I keep a journal of how it was all made, and the beautiful places we have discovered creating the pieces….. I hope you enjoy it.

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Sign Of The Times

October 30, 2010 in Photography

sign of the times

An ode to the more traditional methods of advertising before the arrival of the L.E.D. screen: graphic design, typography, craftsmanship and paint.

My parents are graphic designers, working as a duo from home in rural Northumberland. I grew up watching them go about their work on a big drawing board using a scalpel, spray mount, kappa board, acetate and letraset. During the nineties Apple Macs became more widely available and affordable, and as such my parents’ methods changed forever. They’re now fully Mac-based of course, as I am myself – but when I think back to how they used to work it never ceases to amaze me how they were able to create what they did and work that way.

Ghost signs (as they are most commonly known) began to catch my eye when I moved to London, and I inevitably found it fascinating to think about how they’d been created and the level of skill and craftsmanship that was involved. I later realised how attractively some of the signs I was seeing had aged. I was seeing layers of typography, paint, colour – and combined with the texture of the crumbling and flaking materials, many of them were appealing to me as looking like contemporary pieces of design in the vein of work by the likes of Tomato or Ray Gun magazine. I felt that if these faded remnants of the past I was seeing around me were used on new book jackets or record covers for example, they would stand up incredibly well against a new piece of work, the signs having evolved and aged completely naturally in ways that contemporary designers or illustrators often emulate.

After taking some early photographs of the signs I quickly realised it could become an interesting series to develop, not only because of my personal interest but because in a sense I was preserving the signs – which I had noticed were liable to disappear or be defaced in an instant.

I’m most attracted by the signs that I can stand directly in front of, because ultimately I want the signs I shoot to fill my frame and appear as flat as possible – presenting them as the worthy examples of graphic design that they have now become. I can’t always shoot a sign in this way of course. Sometimes I’ll take a photograph of a sign in a manner that adds a sense of scale – a passing person, or an adjacent building.

Aside from the design and craftsmanship element, I love how ghost signs temporarily teleport you into the past, to a time when there were no digital billboards cluttering our view of the city. Having grown up in the countryside I often find myself wishing I didn’t see the visual pollution of advertisements everywhere I turn and wonder what it would take for London to emulate São Paulo and place a ban on billboards.

My Sign Of The Times project is the ongoing documentation of a particular breed of ghost sign – referencing both my background and upbringing, and my love/hate relationship with new technology. The series now comprises of images from London, New York, New Jersey, Los Angeles, and Edinburgh.

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Emerald Tiger

June 30, 2010 in Photography

A young tiger cub takes a drink from an emerald colored pond.

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Here Comes The Night

April 22, 2010 in Photography

This book is a photographic showcase about the vision of night photography. The selection of participants was curated by Andres Medina and Mikel Aramendia, promoters of this book, and partially comes motivated by the positive experience in the Flickr group Midnight Photo Addict.

This book project is including 34 photographers from locations around the world. Here are the contributors:

- Rafael Alcácer (Spain)
- Mikel Aramendia (Spain)
- Akira Asakura (Japan)
- Adrian Bach (Germany)
- Byron Barret (Canada)
- Lukas Biederman (Poland)
- Thomas Birke (Germany)
- Benoit Chailleux (France)
- Ian Cox-leigh (Canada)
- David Cubberly (USA)
- Keith Davis Young (USA)
- Alistair Dickinson (Australia)
- Kiis Blue (Japan)
- Alexey Fomin (Russia)
- Juan Manuel González (México)
- Samuel Hervás (Spain)
- Ana Himes (Spain)
- Patrick Joust (USA)
- Robert Kaczynsky (Germany)
- Dylan Kasson (USA)
- Kirill Kuletski (England)
- James La Mantia (USA)
- Salva López (Spain)
- Alex Mackenzie (England)
- Andrés Medina (Spain)
- Sander Meisner (The Netherlands)
- Eduardo Moratinos (Spain)
- Eduardo Ochoa (Spain)
- David Pérez (Spain)
- Roberto Treviño (Spain)
- Thorir Vidar (Norway)
- Joseph X. Burke (USA)
- Xiamo Xiong (China)
- Thijs de Zwart (The Netherlands)

“Here Comes The Night” book on blurb, tumblr or facebook

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It’s a Whimsical World – Vogue Korea, Oct 09

September 29, 2009 in Photography

Just like photographer Tim Walker’s Tim Burton inspired spread in the October issue of Harper’s Bazaar, Tony Kim brings out the weird but wonderful side of fashion with this photo set for Vogue Korea. Featuring model Coco Rocha, this spread seems to have even been inspired by old fairy tales or nursery rhymes like Alice in Wonderland and Little Miss Muffet!

whimsical_world