“Practice takes time.

You can’t make attention. You can only create the conditions in which it grows.

You can’t make awareness. It’s already there, but it’s distorted by patterns of perception and emotional reaction.

It takes time for attention to grow. It takes time for new ways to evolve. It takes time to see differently.

The seeing happens in an instant, but it happens only when attention has grown and the conditions are right.

You can’t speed this up any more than you can make a tree grow faster.

Time isn’t the problem. It’s a matter of priorities.

Make practice part of your life and organize everything else around it.

If you try to squeeze practice into your life, other demands squeeze it out. Inevitably.

There is no killer app, no magic pill, no silver bullet.

Bigger, better, faster doesn’t work here.

Forget about being efficient. Be effective.

Clear away the weeds, work the soil and plant seeds. Then tend to them as they grow.

Each time you sit down to practice, take a few minutes to feel in your heart why this is important to you.

Nurture that seed, and all else follows.”


~Ken McLeod

Ken McLeod on honing your most valuable skills - as qtd. by Pat Harada Linfoot, of Octopus Garden Yoga centre in Toronto (www.octopusgardenyoga.com)

“People say photographs don’t lie, mine do.”

- David LaChapelle

Collector’s edition of Life, the Eisie Issue, spring 1998 , Page: 137.
There are always two people in every picture: the photographer and the viewer.” -Ansel Adams

A NY Times Article on photography in the Delivery Room!

“five births a month… $700” a piece!  

Photographer, Lynsey Stone ”tries to arrive when a woman is six centimeters dilated, to capture the later stages of labor. This has resulted in numerous speeding tickets”.

#dedication #photographerswithoutborders

Photofocus’ response to a useful guide on what to emphasize, and how to balance our work with marketing in regard to our online following - where to put what? how much time to put into a web presence? Who to target and what will yield tangible results, ie. sales and livelihood, when a huge user-base is a given?

You don’t take a photograph. You ask, quietly, to borrow it.


~Author Unknown

#observe

” …the strength of photography lies in its ability to evoke humanity. If war is an attempt to negate humanity, then photography can be perceived as the opposite of war.”  
-James Nachtwey, ‘Witness’ Photographer

**Above Photo by Yuri Kozyrev,
2011 Agency/Freelance Photographer of the Year at Pictures of the Year International
Reblogged from Time Lightbox
timelightbox:

The tomb of Sultan Mohammed Telai, great-great grandfather of Nadir Shir, an Afghan king. Its arches are decorated in Italianate stucco, but the tomb itself is badly damaged and graffitied. The strategic location of the hill is readily apparent from here, and was much fought over in the 1990s.
Yuri Kozyrev visited Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai, and saw a Kabul that has been shaped by war. See more here.

” …the strength of photography lies in its ability to evoke humanity. If war is an attempt to negate humanity, then photography can be perceived as the opposite of war.”  

-James Nachtwey, ‘Witness’ Photographer

**Above Photo by Yuri Kozyrev,

2011 Agency/Freelance Photographer of the Year at Pictures of the Year International

Reblogged from Time Lightbox

timelightbox:

The tomb of Sultan Mohammed Telai, great-great grandfather of Nadir Shir, an Afghan king. Its arches are decorated in Italianate stucco, but the tomb itself is badly damaged and graffitied. The strategic location of the hill is readily apparent from here, and was much fought over in the 1990s.

Yuri Kozyrev visited Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai, and saw a Kabul that has been shaped by war. See more here.

‎”Despite all the emphasis on new media, photography has never lost the power to move us” -Norman Solomon

‎”Despite all the emphasis on new media, photography has never lost the power to move us” 

-Norman Solomon


PWB photographer, Jeremy Kai has his work featured at the Doors Open Toronto festival!

Jeremy’s exclusive PWB prints featuring artistic portrayals of Ontario’s underground have garnered a lot of attention at all of our exhibits.  They have been featured at Hidden City, Free My Interior, and Nyood Bar.

PWB photographer, Jeremy Kai has his work featured at the Doors Open Toronto festival!

Jeremy’s exclusive PWB prints featuring artistic portrayals of Ontario’s underground have garnered a lot of attention at all of our exhibits.  They have been featured at Hidden City, Free My Interior, and Nyood Bar.

You’ve got to push yourself harder. You’ve got to look for start looking for pictures nobody else could take. You’ve got to take the tools you have & probe deeper.” – William A Allard

*one of a small, hand-picked selection of PWB artists’ work to be featured at the Pop-Up fashion and art shop, 2nd floor during Nyood’s famous Le Brunch - this Sunday!  Join us for some “well deserved cocktails and shopping.”

“I am a reflection photographing other reflections within a reflection. To photograph reality is to photograph nothing.” 
-Duane Michals
Photo by PWB Photographer, Narbir Gosal
Get inspired at PWB online.

“I am a reflection photographing other reflections within a reflection. To photograph reality is to photograph nothing.” 

-Duane Michals

Photo by PWB Photographer, Narbir Gosal

Get inspired at PWB online.