Chema Gil
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Remember the competition we launched last month in collaboration with Currys and PC World? We asked our readers to send us via Twitter a small gallery with 3 photographs on the theme: “Water, Water, Everywhere“. The prize? A fantastic Canon EOS 7D 18-135mm Digital SLR.
The contest was a real success as we received over 150 entries. Choosing the winner was not an easy task, because there are a lot of really talented photographers out there, but in the end we did it :)
Who Killed Bambi, Curry and PC World really want to thank everyone who took the time to enter the contest and share with us their work and their passion for photography.
So, drumroll…. the winner of the “Water, Water, Everywhere competition” is Jure Čufer, a slovenian photographer and videomaker who sent us a very poetic set of pics that address a critical and urgent issue: the relationship between water as a natural element and water as a commercial product. So he writes:
“The paradox of the modern society, where water is interpreted as property of the few and we are forced to pay for the thing which is literally surrounding us. Whether it’s paid or free, at the end the nature will take it away from us and put it back where it belongs.”



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Who Killed Bambi has teamed up with Currys and PC World to offer our lovely readers the opportunity to win a fantastic Canon EOS 7D 18-135mm Digital SLR.
All you need to do is create a small gallery with 3 photographs you took that approach the theme: Water, Water, Everywhere. Here is how:
The winner will be chosen by Who Killed Bambi, along with Currys and PC World. We will judge each picture on the following criteria: the aesthetic value of each photograph, techniques used and the buzz created by each post.
As always, the usual Terms & Conditions apply.
T&Cs
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Garden Fresh is a photo series by Agan Harahap:
“Garden Fresh series investigates the shifting boundaries between humans and animals in today’s environment and the complex relationship between art and nature. It is like a fable about a journey undertaken by the animals when they venture into our daily lives. The animals are confronted by a new reality that is in conflict with their natural habits and habitats.”
[via fubiz]

Halloween, South Side, 1951, Chicago. Yasuhiro Ishimoto.

(via number six london, source Calumet 412)
19th Century Headless Portraits: “A number of Victorian photographers combined images from more than one negative to create illusions or novelty portraits. “Headless Photographs” featured men and women with “their heads floating in the air or in their laps.”



(via Laughing Squid and Boing Boing)