![]()
A S C R A P B O O K O F S O L U T I O N S F O R T H E P H O T O G R A P H E R
![]()
Enhancing the enjoyment of taking pictures with news that matters, features that entertain and images that delight. Published frequently.
16 October 2025
In this recurring column, we highlight a few items we've run across that don't merit a full story of their own but are interesting enough to bring to your attention. This time we look at Humans of New York, Stan Squirewell, The Pheasant Shoot, AI Lab, Roy Kahmann and religious architectural photos.
- In 'Humans of New York' Takes Over Grand Central, Grace Ebert reports Brandon Stanton's 10,000-image project is now "sprawled across" Grand Central Terminal. "Fifty-foot portraits projected in the Main Concourse, along with smaller photographs and quotes lining the underground passageway fill every spot typically reserved for advertising and transit information," she writes.
- Kate Mothes reviews Stan Squirewell's Mixed-Media Collages at Plattsburgh State Art Museum through Dec. 5.
- Suzanne Sease features The Pheasant Shoot, the personal project of Jason Knott. "Traditions are precious," Knott writes. "And those of the English countryside, sacred."
- Nilofer Khan reviews VSCO's AI Lab which "gives photographers access to use artificial intelligence to refine their images."
- Jim Casper interviews Roy Kahmann about Hungry Eye Gallery in Amsterdam. Kahman has agreed to be on the jury of this year's LensCulture Black & White awards.
- Dahlia Ambrose presents 24 Religious Architectural Photos. "Religious architectural photography is a bit complicated because the architecture itself can be very detailed both inside and out," she writes.
More to come! Meanwhile, here's a look back. And please support our efforts...