Urban Explorers are likely to find absolutely anything when they venture into abandoned places. Read about what this photographer found when he ventured into an abandoned Sugar Mill... It's also nice to read about how places have been rescued from becoming abandoned and lost to history, like this New York lighthouse which people are working hard to restore and make into a B & B!
Hotels can be fairly daunting at the best of times, especially some of those old ones and at night. But I think that these urban exploration captures of abandoned hotels and hotel rooms are actually quite beautiful in their own strange way...
:bulletorange: Avoid the use of the font Optima, particularly for luxury or similarly "fancy" types of clients. It looks generally dated and plain.
:bulletorange: Try not to pair different sans-serif fonts (ex: Arial and Helvetica), but if you do, do not use fonts that are similar. The key is to use fonts that are distinctly different, such as a condensed sans for headlines and regular sans like Helvetica or Verdana for subheads or body copy. If you use two that are similar, it will look like you mistakenly didn't update all your text with the same font.
:bulletorange: If you want to pair a serif font with a sans-serif or vice versa, there
52 Street tips from the masters by StamatisGR, journal
52 Street tips from the masters
“If you can smell the street by looking at the photo, it’s a street photograph.” — Bruce Gilden
“Turn your attention to the four-legged population.” — Ying Tang
“Take a bus. Do weekly shopping. Pop into a public loo.” — Nils Jorgensen
“Document some evidence of human ingenuity that would otherwise go unnoticed. Do it without including any humans in the picture.” — Michael Wolf
“Get lost in a thicket of signs and structures.” — Wolfgang Zurborn
“Never ignore a cliché.” — Artem Zhitenev
This project is aimed at stimulating creativity by training your eye to grasp composition more effectively, or by suggesting unusual approaches to art.
In this deviation you will find all the links to all published articles (see the artist's comments).
If you made some pictures with an exercise in mind, I will be more than happy to feature your artwork in my next article! Any exercise whenever your want. Just send me a note with your picture and exercise's number. Giving a link to the exercise in your artist's comments is appreciated ))
If you want to join the project by writing detailed articles on your favourite photography practices, pl