Sunset Through The Masts Of Sailboats Mo Paper Framed Print 1 5/8″ White 28×22 Photo On Paper

Sunset Through The Masts Of Sailboats Mo Paper Framed Print 1 5/8″ White 28×22 Photo On Paper


Sunset through the masts of sailboats mo” is an art print by Alfred Eisenstaedt from The Life Picture Collection. Get photo prints of “Sunset through the masts of sailboats mo” in a variety of frames, styles, and materials. Photographer Bio Alfred Eisenstaedt (1898-1995), or Eisie to those who knew him, received his first camera as a gift from his uncle at 14, a few years after moving to Berlin from Poland with his family. At 17, he was drafted to the German army. His interest in photography blossomed while recovering from a shrapnel wound. He became a regular at museums, studying light and composition. By 31, he was a full-time photographer. In 1933 he was sent to Italy where he shot the first meeting between Hitler and Mussolini. Two years later, when Hitler came to power, Eisie immigrated to America. Soon after arriving in New York, he was hired along with three other photographers-Margaret Bourke-White, Thomas McAvoy and Peter Stackpole-by Time Inc. founder Henry Luce for a secret start-up venture known as “Project X.” Six months later, Life magazine premiered on November 23, 1936. The first issue sold for 10 cents and featured five pages of Eisie’s pictures. His most famous photo was the kiss in Times Square on V-J day, about which he said, “I was running along the street grabbing any and every girl in sight. Whether she was a grandmother, stout, thin, old, didn’t make any difference. None of the pictures that were possible pleased me. Then, suddenly in a flash I saw something white being grabbed. I turned and clicked the moment the sailor kissed the nurse.” Over his career, Eisie shot a total of nearly 100 covers for Life magazine and some 10,000 prints. The Life Picture Collection From one of the most iconic magazines ever to hit the shelves comes The Life Collection – an archive of some of the most recognizable imagery of the 20th Century. Documenting events in politics, culture, celebrity, the arts and the American experience, these compelling and provocative photographs include the works of some of the greatest photographers capturing some of the greatest moments in history.

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Blackmagic DaVinci Resolve Follows Adobe by Adding Apple Touch Bar Support

Blackmagic has announced that their color grading and video editing platform, DaVinci Resolve, has been updated to version 12.5.4 and is available for download, free of charge, from the Blackmagic Design website today for both DaVinci Resolve Studio and DaVinci Resolve customers. The new update brings a few nice changes, but the most notable one is Apple MacBook Pro Touch Bar support. Blackmagic now joins Adobe as the only two major software manufacturers in the photo/video space to offer support of Apple’s latest tech.

When editing video, the Touch Bar is context sensitive and displays commands based on whether the media pool, source viewer or timeline are selected. Customers can quickly switch between trim modes, navigate the timeline and perform different types of edits without ever having to use the mouse or pull down menus.

Colorists can use the Touch Bar to do everything from adjusting primary sliders and color wheels, to changing mid tone detail, saturation, tint and more. The Touch Bar can be used to save or wipe gallery stills, toggle viewer modes, work with split screen mode to compare shots and even use multi touch gestures to adjust multiple color parameters, such as printer lights, at the same time.

Here is a full list of what’s new in DaVinci Resolve 12.5.4:

  • Support for the new MacBook Pro Touch Bar
  • Additional Rec. 2100 and 2020 support for high dynamic range workflows
  • Support for Grass Valley HQ and HQX codecs on Mac, Windows and Linux
  • Added support for preserving super-white and sub-black data with ProRes 4444
  • Added new sliders to control Dolby Vision analysis data
  • Added P3-D65 IDTs and ODTs in ACES
  • Added Rec. 2020 ST.2084 1000 nits ODT clamped to P3 in ACES
  • Added support for image orientation flag in DPX files
  • Improved support for CR2 files from Canon 5D Mark IV
  • Improved grading and playback performance when working with large node graphs

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TIME – 100 Photographs: The Most Influential Images of All Time

Recently, I had the pleasure of studying TIME Magazine’s Special Edition, “100 Photographs: The Most Influential Images of All Time”, from which I came away captivated by this stunning collection of images of some of the most profound and influential events in human history.

This special issue features many iconic photographs, such as Yousef Karsh’s portrait of Winston Churchill in the midst of the second World War; Dorothea Lange’s haunting “Migrant Mother” made during the depths of the Great Depression; the Hubble Space Telescope’s unprecedented capture of the spectacular Eagle Nebula; Neil Armstrong’s timeless image of Buzz Aldrin standing on the surface of the moon; the first cell phone photo; and other perhaps lesser known photos that are equally powerful.

Some notable quotes from the editors Ben Goldberger, Paul Moakley, and Kira Pollock:

“What all 100 share is that they are turning points in our human experience.”

” . . . one aspect of influence has largely remained constant throughout photography’s more than 175 years: the photographer has to be there.”

“The best photography is a form of bearing witness, a way of bringing a single vision to the larger world.”

For our Readers who are students of the history of photography, as I am, and for those who are interested in the back stories behind powerful images, this TIME issue is a must read! You can check out the online version of “100 Photographs” right here.

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Adobe Breaks Record Revenue For Fourth Straight Quarter, Fiscal Year 2016 of $5.85B

You may not love 2016, but based on Adobe’s rather absurd revenue record-breaking streak, they probably do. Yesterday, Adobe posted their fourth quarter earnings report and it beat expectations with $ 1.6 billion in revenue and $ 0.89 earnings per share according to Seeking Alpha (expectations from Adobe had them at $ 1.59 billion and $ 0.86 earnings per share).

Much of what Adobe’s stock did was move up, as seen above.

In all of 2016, Adobe made a whopping $ 5.85 billion, up from 2015 which saw $ 4.8 billion. Though Adobe no longer releases subscriber numbers (annoying), this seems to show that their choice to move to a subscription model was a smart one, at least from a pure-money standpoint.

Well, good on you Adobe. I guess someone had to enjoy this year.

[Via VentureBeat]

 

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Canon Introduces Four New Compact PIXMA Wireless Inkjet All-In-One printers

Canon has announced four new wireless PIXMA printers that are more compact than their predecessors, but don’t skimp on the usability or functionality. The new PIXMA TS5020, PIXMA TS6020, PIXMA TS8020 and PIXMA TS9020 Wireless Inkjet All-In-One Printers are small and sleek printers that Canon clearly designed to not only work well, as their printers generally do, but also look good doing it (the TS9020 shown above is the prime example of this). 

The printers are similar, but differ in design slightly:

PIXMA TS9020 Wireless Inkjet All-In-One Printer – 5 inch screen with touch panel and on-screen buttons

PIXMA TS8020 Wireless Inkjet All-In-One Printer – 4.3 inch screen with touch panel and on-screen buttons

PIXMA TS6020 Wireless Inkjet All-In-One Printer – 3 inch screen with touch panel and off-screen buttons

PIXMA TS5020 Wireless Inkjet All-In-One Printer – 3 inch screen with off-screen directional pad and start/stop buttons

Canon says that their new user interface includes a large, simplistic touch LCD screen making it easy to read and select functions such as copy, scan or print. The size of each new PIXMA model has been minimized, making the printer easy to store and take up less space on a desk.

Each new PIXMA model in this series will be ready to print six seconds after it is turned on and the command is sent over from your laptop, smartphone or tablet. This is half the time than on select previous models.

Wireless printing means you don’t have to plug in to print. Each printer in this series features cloud printing capabilities through a compatible smartphone or tablet device, so PIXMA you can print using the Canon PIXMA Cloud Link from virtually anywhere to link with various cloud services they use to print photos and documents. Further adding to the overall wireless capabilities of the PIXMA line of printers is Google Cloud Print, which allows users to send Gmail messages, file attachments and select Google Docs to the printer from any compatible devices.

After scanning a document or photo, the PIXMA TS9020, TS8020, TS6020, and TS5020 printers will show a reminder on the LCD screen to take the document with you to avoid misplacing important information.  The PIXMA TS9020 and TS8020 models are also able to print directly through NFC via Android devices further adding to the overall ease of use of these machines.

The PIXMA TS5020 Wireless Inkjet All-In-One Printer is $ 99.99 MSRP and the PIXMA TS6020 Wireless Inkjet All-In-One Printer is $ 149.99 MSRP. Both are available in black, white and gray. The PIXMA TS8020 Wireless Inkjet All-In-One Printer is $ 179.99 MSRP and is available in black, white, red, and brown and the PIXMA TS9020 Wireless Inkjet All-In-One Printer is $ 199.99 MSRP and is offered in two-tone red/black and white/black.

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