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Like a long-forgotten photo album, this book opens up to display a forgotten world that comes to life through 3-D technology. It features rare images from New York City's past covering the years 1850-1920s.
View the spectacles of Minnesota both wonderful and sublime depicting the marvelous works of nature and what men and women are doing to improve the state as taken by the most skillful photographers.
This publication offers an unparalleled opportunity to appreciate the development of the artist's work as it unfolded over nearly seven decades, beginning with his early academic works, made in Holland before he moved to the United States in 1926, and concluding with his final, sparely abstract paintings of the late 1980s.
Like a long-forgotten photo album, this book opens up to display a forgotten world that comes to life through 3-D technology. It features rare images from Washington DC's past, covering the period 1850-1920.
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Like a long-forgotten photo album, this book opens up to display a forgotten world that comes to life through 3-D technology. It features rare images of Native Americans and the Wild West and is an intriguing look back to the beginnings of a new country and a now-vanished culture.
One of the main concerns for digital photographers today is asset management: how to file, find, protect, and re-use their photos. The best solutions can be found in The DAM Book, our bestselling guide to managing digital images efficiently and effectively. Anyone who shoots, scans, or stores digital photographs is practicing digital asset management (DAM), but few people do it in a way that makes sense. In this second edition, photographer Peter Krogh -- the leading expert on DAM -- provides new tools and techniques to help professionals, amateurs, and students: Understand the image file lifecycle: from shooting to editing, output, and permanent storage Learn new ways to use metadata and ke...
In 2002, we learned that President George Washington had eight (and, later, nine) enslaved Africans in his house while he lived in Philadelphia from 1790 to 1797. The house was only one block from Independence Hall and, though torn down in 1832, it housed the enslaved men and women Washington brought to the city as well as serving as the country's first executive office building. Intense controversy erupted over what this newly resurfaced evidence of enslaved people in Philadelphia meant for the site that was next door to the new home for the Liberty Bell. How could slavery best be remembered and memorialized in the birthplace of American freedom? For Marc Howard Ross, this conflict raised a...