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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
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Enhancing the enjoyment of taking pictures with news that matters, features that entertain and images that delight. Published frequently.
27 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 Clay Feet, the Photomonth Festival, lunar photography, urban geometry and that DX 35mm Nikkor.
- Sophie Wright interviews Rebecca Horne about her project Clay Feet, which "charts the unstable terrain of transformation as an embodied act of making, unmaking and reclaiming the female image."
- The Guardian covers the PhotoMonth Festival in London.
- Jason Farago writes about How Lunar Photography Brought the Heavens Down to Earth (gift link). "We brought quite a bit of gear," the presentation starts. "A dozen cameras are strewn, still today, on the lunar surface: abandoned, so Apollo's astronaut-photographers could lighten their load for the return voyages."
- In Urban Geometry, Dahlia Ambrose writes the Light Stalking weekly community wrap-up with a look at more urban images, shots that break the Rule of Thirds and more.
- The Exciting New Nikon Lens Mike Johnston raves about because it has "beautiful bokeh. Like, switch-systems-for-it beautiful" is the new DX 35mm Nikkor. But there's a deal killer. "No VR in the lens. No IBIS in the body."
More to come! Meanwhile, here's a look five years back. And please support our efforts...