NUMBER ONE HUNDRED & FORTY SEVEN.
July06

Portland, ME. May 2011

NUMBER ONE HUNDRED & FORTY SIX.
July06

Buena Vista, CO. May 2011

NUMBER NINETY SIX.
June20

Another project of Hannah Davis’, Imaginary Zine is an online showcase of fresh photographic talents. The site pulls together work from artists which, in her own words, oozes mysticism, ritual, youth, lo-fi, point and shoot cameras, diary and nostalgia. There’s not an aesthetic in that list I don’t like.

NUMBER NINETY FIVE.
June20

Adelaide based photographer Luke Byrne, or coolhandluke, the moniker he goes by on the interwebs, has at least once referred to himself as some conglomerate of all those great Lukes who have gone before: the biblical-writer-come-holy-man, the Jedi, and of course that one badass Luke that Paul Newman played… it’s all a part of his ambition to become the ultimate Luke.

When that’s not taking up his time though, you’re more than likely to see this particular Luke with a camera in his cool hand, shooting sweet indie bands, or international fashion labels, or just his mates kickin’ it around the Rad.

More images after the break yo.

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NUMBER EIGHTY NINE.
May21

Where They Create is an ongoing project of Australian based photographer Paul Barbera. When travelling on assignment, Paul looks up local artists and creatives, inviting himself into their creative spaces to shoot the environment they choose to work in. What has resulted is an anthology to the modern studio; it is amazing to see common threads across oceans and industries repeated in the images. Here’s a selection for you to peruse. I just hope one day Paul might look me up!

MONSTER CHILDREN magazine, Sydney Australia

PAUL DAVIES painter, Sydney Australia

TIN + ED graphic designers, Melbourne Australia

SWINEMUENDER STR creative collective, Amsterdam The Netherlands

YIMMYS YAYO blogger, Sydney Australia

ANREALAGE fashion designers, Tokyo Japan

NUMBER EIGHTY SEVEN.
May21

The Land Between Here and Mountains is a celebration of those in-between spaces; a visual exploration of the journey rather than the destination. Curated by Jess Gough and Hannah Davis, whose work also features, the blog collects imagery around the theme that we haven’t quite arrived yet, but what happens on the way is just as beautiful, in fact sometimes even more-so.

More images after the break, or you could just go look at the blog itself.

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NUMBER SEVENTY SIX.
May05

New Yorker Chad Moore (or Charles Wesley Moore as his parents deemed him) takes photographs that feel like a documentation of his life rather than intentional shots. But who wouldn’t want to take a record of escapades where female friends tend to be sans clothing and everyone appears to be having the time of their lives. We’re only young once, right kids? I have a friend called Chad who is moving to The Big Apple in a few weeks. I can only hope his new life is half as good as Chad Moore’s.

NUMBER SEVENTY THREE.
May04

I’m officially annoyed about not being in Sydney for Thursday night’s opening at the Monster Children Gallery. This is due to the fact that the latest work to grace the MC Gallery’s walls is an amalgamation of Urban Outfitters catalogue photography, collectively titled 40 LB. SILK. I guess I’ll just have to wait til next week, but if you’re in town, you should definitely drop by from 6pm (20 Burton St, Darlinghurst) for a few free Asahis or glasses of vino, and check out the sweet prints.

NUMBER SEVENTY TWO.
May04

Interesting editorial for Crash Magazine (France), shot by Xevi Muntané. Chunky knits and silk scarves complement tailored day wear, perfect inspiration for the cooler weather that is creeping into May. More images after the cut.

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NUMBER SEVENTY ONE.
April28

Melburnian Liesl Pfeffer is a visual artist when she’s not drumming in the band Lion Park. Of late she’s been pasting together bits of existing photographs, resulting in these fantastical landscapes. Tres crafty!