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How Photography Began

2023-06-26 06:49:41

Beginning of the photo, first name. Our name is "photography", Sir John Herschel, the year when the photography process was first held in 1839 using this word. (* 1) This word comes from light and light written in Greek. Prior to describing the various stages leading to the development of the photograph, there was a surprising, pretty incredible prophecy made by a man named de la Roche (1729-1787) in a work called Giphantie. In this fictional story, you can capture natural images on a canvas coated with sticky material.

I am a photographer who likes to write. A few years ago, I started shifting my photos from those that were easy to classify as a business hobby. I began taking pictures of important moments for people, providing in-store signs to local fashion boutiques, and writing for a very popular photo site, things seem to be getting very good is. This is an illusion. Several people in the industry have begun to acknowledge me from my writing and work, but my photography business rarely exists. I feel it is a failure in every aspect, and my "business" supports the feeling of failure. I give up a lot of the time I want to do, sell the majority of my equipment, and continue my life. But I am different. I kept attaching, continuing to be a photographer, I worked hard to connect with people who appreciate my work. I am not independent and not wealthy, but I will fast forward for about 4 years.

Background The ideas and concepts behind the photographs began in 2006 when I was reporting about activities during the Afghanistan war. A project called Ax Me Biggie, or Mr. Take My Picture, opened my vision for a new and exciting way of portrait photography. Along the dusty roadside in the downtown of Kabul, I caught an anonymous Afghan people against the outdoor studio background of a borrowed local photographer, using a Polaroid movie. Recently, Papua New Guinea experienced the most important cultural changes and early changes of colonization. The society of Papua New Guinea lost its culture and tradition due to colonization, globalization, and the influence of Western interference.