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iPhone photography - page 9

Check Out the View: Gallery of iPhone Photos From San Francisco

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@Laura Brunow Miner
@Laura Brunow Miner

Laura Brunow Miner took this nice series of snaps with her iPhone capturing the view from one bench in San Francisco’s Dolores Park.

Interesting to see how different the bench looks on foggy days, bright days, and with couples, old people and tattooed hipsters sitting on it.

@Laura Brunow Miner
@Laura Brunow Miner

Check out the gallery on her site, there are 27 park bench pics so far, it’s a good reminder of what you can do with a point-and-shoot cam in everyday settings.

@Laura Brunow Miner
@Laura Brunow Miner

If you’ve done a similar project with your iPhone, write in or let us know in the comments, we’d love to see ’em.
Via CBS 5

Crash Victim “Born Again” Thanks to iPhone

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Barely 19,  Muscovite Vera Uvarova landed herself in the hospital after a car crash that left her immobile, save for one arm.

Four days after the accident, a friend gave her an iPhone.  The device became Vera’s visual connection with her beaten body and the resulting pictures are showcased in an exhibition at Moscow Gallery Na Solyanke.


“This transformation was important to me…” Uvarova told the Moscow Times. “Unable to lift my head, the only way I could see my legs, for instance, was through the lens of my iPhone.”

She was restricted to hospital life for close to three months, but the exhibition focuses on the first transformative 800 hours, hence its title, “800 Hours on My Back with an iPhone in Hand. How I Was Born Again with the Help of Photography.”

You can view some of them online here.

Images courtesy, ©Vera Uvarova

Via Moscow Times

iPhone: The New Polaroid Camera?

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Photographer Lisa Wiseman , who describes herself as “addicted to Polaroid film,” snapped a series of pics with her iPhone in everyday settings she called “the new Polaroid.”

About them she says,”These images are the evolution of the Polaroid: they were all taken with my iPhone camera. Because the iPhone is becoming a ubiquitous and trendy accessory, on-the-go picture taking is now the norm.

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I see people using their iPhones to take spontaneous photos in the same carefree way that cheap Polaroid has been used in the past…Just like Polaroids had a specific size and look, iPhone photos are unmistakable because the technology limits them to a fixed size and resolution.” (NB: we’ve resized them here).
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Complete album on her site.

Images (c)Lisa Wiseman

Via Notcot