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World Press Photo of the Year

Posted: 2007-02-09 04:00pm
by wautd
Can't direct link the photos so you'll have to click (top left)

I like it. I think an eye-opener for many westerners that there are also secular nations in the Middle East.

The gas pipeline explosion in Nigeria is my favorite tough. Very surreal (just below the first pic)

Posted: 2007-02-10 06:55am
by 2000AD
Why are so many people still using black and white? Surely for news coverage colour would be a lot better?

Posted: 2007-02-10 07:36am
by salm
2000AD wrote:Why are so many people still using black and white? Surely for news coverage colour would be a lot better?
These Photos are not edited for news coverage. These Photos are edited for winning a contest and since black&white is arty i can see why many chose to use it.
Personally i like the high contrasts you can use in bw photos which.

Posted: 2007-02-10 08:28am
by Stofsk
2000AD wrote:Why are so many people still using black and white? Surely for news coverage colour would be a lot better?
For newspapers? Colour ink costs more than black ink.

Then again, that hasn't stopped newspapers from switching to colour. So who knows.

Posted: 2007-02-10 08:36am
by Bounty
For illustrations, colour is better, but if you're trying to depict a mood or evoke an emotional response, black and white can be very powerful. It also give the photos a sort of timelessness.

Posted: 2007-02-10 09:47am
by Pick
Many photography classes work predominately--if not all--in black and white because the emotional impact tends to improve.

Re: World Press Photo of the Year

Posted: 2007-02-10 12:27pm
by andrewgpaul
wautd wrote:Can't direct link the photos so you'll have to click (top left)

I like it. I think an eye-opener for many westerners that there are also secular nations in the Middle East.
Saw that in the paper today. Didn't realise it was a competition winner; thought it was illustrating a story. FWIW, a lot of Lebanese are Christian. Not necessarily secular.

Posted: 2007-02-13 09:44am
by Vympel

Posted: 2007-02-13 10:15am
by Companion Cube
Damn, I thought you were being sarcastic. :x That poor man. I'm guessing some kind of fire caused that?

Posted: 2007-02-13 12:07pm
by AniThyng
3rd Impact wrote:
Damn, I thought you were being sarcastic. :x That poor man. I'm guessing some kind of fire caused that?
He was a combat engineer in Iraq and his truck got hit by a suicide bomber, if I remember the news articles on him properly.

Posted: 2007-02-14 11:06am
by The Grim Squeaker
AniThyng wrote:
3rd Impact wrote:
Damn, I thought you were being sarcastic. :x That poor man. I'm guessing some kind of fire caused that?
He was a combat engineer in Iraq and his truck got hit by a suicide bomber, if I remember the news articles on him properly.
I saw that and was sure it was just a picture or fictional portrait. Damn it looks unnatural - poor girl. (Isn't plastic surgery applicable in a case like this?)

Posted: 2007-02-14 11:20am
by Vendetta
DEATH wrote:I saw that and was sure it was just a picture or fictional portrait. Damn it looks unnatural - poor girl. (Isn't plastic surgery applicable in a case like this?)
The kind of facial reconstruction that he will require (and is likely partway through) will take a very long time indeed, and will still leave marks.

It looks like his lower jaw was pulverised, and his nose was destroyed, for a start, and jawbones and cartilege don't grow back.

It's an important message that picture makes. Although the three thousand deaths in iraq are high profile indicators of the cost of the war, for every one of them there are five wounded, some of them like this man.

Posted: 2007-02-14 07:59pm
by Adrian Laguna
I like this series of pictures. Tenerife is one of the Canary Islands. These people must have rowed from the African coast, a journey of about 100 km (yes, it's longer than doing Cuba-Florida). You can see the boat in the background in one of the pictures. What I like about the picture is the tourists actively helping rather than just letting the Red Cross handle it.

For Spain, the Canary islands and the cities of Ceuta and Melilla are a Mexican border. They've been having trouble with lots of poor Moroccans moving to the more prosperous Spain. I find this hilariously ironic, since the Moroccans went to all the trouble of asserting their independence and all.