FSA photos of WWII and the Great Depression, but now in color

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Saying grace before the barbeque dinner at the New Mexico Fair. Pie Town, New Mexico, October 1940. Reproduction from color slide. Photo by Russell Lee. Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress

Some old friends from my hometown of Big Prairie, Ohio, Don and Faye Baker, recently sent me a link to a collection of excellent Farm Security Adminstration photos from the Great Depression and World War II that were highlighted last summer on the photo blog of The Denver Post, in an entry entitled: Captured: America in Color from 1939-1943.

What a great and timely reminder from the Bakers. I'd planned to do a quick post about the photos when they first appeared in July, but got sidetracked and never posted the link here. Thanks to Don and Faye I have a second chance to share these wonderful photos.

Documentary photos in color from that era are especially rare, so it's great to have a chance to see the work, and to have it preserved digitally for future viewers. Preserving the imges is an important aspect, as you can see where the blacks in some of the Ektracrome-based films are starting to deteriorate and taking on color casts.

St. Louis really is a baseball town

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31 Oct. 2011 -- ST. LOUIS -- A litttle more proof that St. Louis really is a baseball town. I guess dry cleaning might be the best way to get champagne and beer out of a baseball jersey. As seen at Orpheum Cleaners in St. Louis Monday, Oct. 31, 2011. Photo © copyright 2011 Sid Hastings.

It's been a crazy fall, with lots of good work from great clients new and old. And portion of it was from jobs related to the amazing and exhilerating run to the World Series by the St. Louis Cardinals.

Post a photo to social media? Be prepared to see your copyright violated

As detailed in the British Journal of Photography, the BBC is among the legion of publishers that seem to view online photo sources like Twitpic, Google+ and Facebook as copyright-free zones, where the photos are there for the picking. As reported by BJP, when a UK-based photographer inquired about copyright and photo credits for images the BBC lifts from social media, this was the response he received:

"Twitter is a social network platform which is available to most people who have a computer and therefore any content on it is not subject to the same copyright laws as it is already in the public domain."

The news organization later issued an ammended statement saying:

"In terms of permission and attribution, we make every effort to contact people who've taken photos we want to use in our coverage and ask for their permission before doing so. However, in exceptional situations, where there is a strong public interest and often time constraints, such as a major news story like the recent Norway attacks or rioting in England, we may use a photo before we've cleared it."

Read the full report here in the British Journal of Photography.

Rob Haggart, over at the blog A Photo Editor, has detailed the efforts by Twitpic and other social media photo services to claim distribution and licensing rights on all work posted to their site.

From the Twitpic Terms of Service agreement:

“…you hereby grant Twitpic a worldwide, non-exclusive, royalty-free, sublicenseable and transferable license to use, reproduce, distribute, prepare derivative works of…” and “…after you remove or delete your media from the Service provided that any sub-license by Twitpic to use, reproduce or distribute the Content prior to such termination may be perpetual and irrevocable.”

Here's the link to Rob's good work on the topic at A Photo Editor.

As noted elsewhere, most effectively on blog PhotoFocus, both Google + and Facebook have language in their Terms of Service that allows them to distribute images as they see fit. Their arguement is that this allows them to build the custom newsfeed each client gets, but as many professional photographers read the language, it also allows the organization to license and distribute the work to other firms and invididuals, too.

Here's a sample of Facebook's current ToS language:

"...you grant us a non-exclusive, transferable, sub-licensable, royalty-free, worldwide license to use any IP content that you post on or in connection with Facebook ("IP License"). This IP License ends when you delete your IP content or your account unless your content has been shared with others, and they have not deleted it."

Us this link to reach the posting on the PhotoFocus blog.

Here's the thought for the day – post your photos, if you must, but post as an educated user of social media. And realize you may be endangering your copyright in the process.

Multimedia journalist, man of action

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31 JULY 2011 -- IMPERIAL, Mo. -- A photographer, outfitted with a video camera, a cell phone camera and a digital SLR, works at the Dedication Service for the new building hosting St. John Catholic Church in rural Imperial, Mo. Sunday, July 31, 2011. The parish, located along Route 21 in Jefferson County, was established in 1869. Photo © copyright 2011 Sid Hastings.

Recently, while photographing the Dedication Service for the new home of St. John Catholic Church in Imperial, Mo., I found myself working with a photographer who was doing video, stills with a DSLR and still with a cell phone. The guy was so busy I never did get a chance to ask his name or inquire who he was working for that day. I was there for the St. Louis Review, the paper of the Archdiocese of St. Louis, and I was really busy trying to cover the event with just stills. Whoever his employer was, they certainly got their money's worth from his efforts that afternoon.

Covering the Good Friday tornado in St. Louis


Aftermath of April 22, 2011 Bridgeton tornado - Images by Sid Hastings

As people gathered for Good Friday services in St. Louis, sat down to dinner with family and friends or turned on the evening news on Friday, April 22, 2011, a storm gathered in Central Missouri which later that evening blew through the region with great destruction. Hundreds of homes were destroyed or render uninhabitable, and more than 2,000 residences suffered some type of damage in the storm.

But, miracluously, no one was seriously hurt as the storm assualted the region. A little human miracle in a swath of destroyed posessions.

That evening and the following day a team of photographers working for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch spread across the metro area to document the destruction and the tales of quick thinking that saved lives and preserved property. I landed in Bridgeton, on Beaverton Drive in the Harmann Estates subdivision, which took a direct hit from the storm. The photo galleries, which were built around the work of Robert Cohen, JB Forbes, David Carson, Johnny Andrews, Laurie Skrivan, Christian Gooden, Emily Rasinski and myself, drew more than one million pageviews within 48 hours.

As one resident said while I was working at his house, yeah, they lost everything, even some irreplaceable mementoes, but with no one suffering a serious injury, they can make new memories. And his wife added that while it was terrible to lose everything in their house, she does like to shop, and it looks like she'll have plenty of reasons to hit the stores soon.

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Usually I don't do self-portraits on assignment, but given the gravity of the event, I snapped one quick frame while working on what little remained of the home of Terry Hayes and Mary Ellen Norton-Hayes in Bridgeton.

Photo credit: © Sid Hastings

Sebastian Junger Remembers Tim Hetherington | Vanity Fair

Tim, man, what can I say? For the first few hours the stories were confused enough that I could imagine maybe none of them were true, but they finally settled into one brief, brutal narrative: while covering rebel forces in the city of Misrata, Libya, you got hit by a piece of shrapnel and bled to death on the way to the clinic. You couldn’t have known this, but your fellow photographer Chris Hondros would die later that evening. I’m picturing you wounded in the back of a pickup truck with your three wounded colleagues. There are young men with bandannas on their heads and guns in their hands and everyone is screaming and the driver is jamming his overloaded vehicle through the destroyed streets of that city, trying to get you all to the clinic in time.

He didn’t. I’ve never even heard of Misrata before, but for your whole life it was there on a map for you to find and ponder and finally go to. All of us in the profession—the war profession, for lack of a better name—know about that town. It’s there waiting for all of us. But you went to yours, and it claimed you. You went in by boat because the city was besieged by forces loyal to Muammar Qaddafi (another name you probably never gave much thought to during your life) and you must have known this was a bad one. Boat trips are usually such nice affairs, but not this one. How strange to be out on the water off a beautiful coastline with the salt smell and the wind in your face—except this time, you’re headed toward a place of violence and killing and destruction. You must have known that the unthinkable had to be considered. You must have known you might not ever get back on that boat alive.

You and I were always talking about risk because she was the beautiful woman we were both in love with, right? The one who made us feel the most special, the most alive? We were always trying to have one more dance with her without paying the price. All those quiet, huddled conversations we had in Afghanistan: Where to walk on the patrols, what to do if the outpost gets overrun, what kind of body armor to wear. You were so smart about it, too—so smart about it that I would actually tease you about being scared. Of course you were scared—you were terrified. We both were. We were terrified and we were in love, and in the end, you were the one she chose.

I’m in the truck with you. I’m imagining those last minutes. You’re on your back watching the tops of the buildings jolt by and the blue Mediterranean sky beyond them. I almost drowned once, and when I finally got back to the beach I was all alone and I just lay there watching the clouds go by. I’d never really thought about clouds before, but there they were, all for me, just glorious. Maybe you saw those clouds, too, but you weren’t out of it yet, and you probably knew it. I know what you were thinking: What a silly way to die. What a silly, selfish, ridiculous mistake to have made.

Don’t think that, brother. You had a very specific vision for your work and for your life, and that vision included your death. It didn’t have to, but that’s how it turned out. I’m so sorry, Tim. The conversation we could have had about this crazy stunt of yours! Christ, I would have yelled at you, but you know that. Getting mad was how we kept each other safe, how we kept the other from doing something stupid.

Your vision, though. Let’s talk about that. It’s what you wanted to communicate to the world about this story—about every story. Maybe Misrata wasn’t worth dying for—surely that thought must have crossed your mind in those last moments—but what about all the Misratas of the world? What about Liberia and Darfur and Sri Lanka and all those terrible, ugly stories that you brought such humanity to? That you helped bring the world’s attention to?

After the war in Liberia you rented a house in the capital, and lived there for years. Years. Who does that? No one I know except you, my dear friend. That’s part of Misrata, too. That’s also part of what you died for: the decision to live a life that was thrown open to all the beauty and misery and ugliness and joy in the world. Before this last trip you told me that you wanted to make a film about the relationship between young men and violence. You had this idea that young men in combat act in ways that emulate images they’ve seen—movies, photographs—of other men in other wars, other battles. You had this idea of a feedback loop between the world of images and the world of men that continually reinforced and altered itself as one war inevitably replaced another in the long tragic grind of human affairs.

That was a fine idea, Tim—one of your very best. It was an idea that our world very much needs to understand. I don’t know if it was worth dying for—what is?—but it was certainly an idea worth devoting one’s life to. Which is what you did. What a vision you had, my friend. What a goddamned terrible, beautiful vision of things.

Sebastian Junger is a contributing editor of Vanity Fair.


A version of this article will appear in the June 2011 issue.

As you may have heard, veteran photographers Tim Hetherington and Chris Hondros were killed yesterday covering the civil war in Libya.

Although a fan of the work of both, I didn't have the pleasure of meeting either before their untimely loss yesterday. But the photo community is a small one, and the deaths have reverberated across the world of photography.

This is an amazing and powerful and moving essay by Sebastian Junger from Vanity Fair. It's a powerful portrayal of friendship and the values of the men and women who document the violence of our world, so we can be informed on both the facts and the humanity of wars and deaths and loss....

Head & Shoulders, but not the shampoo

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As seen recently at Show Me Stylz Salon, Fyler Avenue at Watson Road in St. Louis. Image (c) 2011 Sid Hastings.

 

Sometimes when you're driving down the street you see something that stands out as being head-and-shoulders, or at least a head, above all the things around it.

 

Photo credit: Image © 2011 Sid Hastings.

Thirty-three minutes spent "Peeling the Onion" of picture editing

From The Photo Life, powered by Pictage

 

No one offers a more insightful examination of the elements that combine to make great and compelling photography than Portland picture editor Mike Davis. Today he's a freelance picture editor, working with photographers and publishers on various photo-driven projects, after having worked at The Oregonian in Portland, the photo staff at The White House in Washington, DC, Copley Chicago Newspapers' Sun Publications division, National Geographic Magazine and The Albuquerque Tribune. I had the good fortune to work with Mike at both Sun Publications and at the Geographic, and learned a great deal about photography and picture editing in the process.

Recently he sat down with Travis Scheer for an interview pubslished on the blog The Photo Life, which is sponsored by the photo hosting site Pictage. It's 33 minutes well-spent on the thoughts and emotions that go into great work.

 

Video courtesy: The Photo Life