Zoom Info
  • Camera
  • ISO
  • Aperture
  • Exposure
  • Focal Length
  • Nikon D3s
  • 51200
  • f/2.8
  • 1/30th
  • 400mm
humansofnewyork:

Seen in the subway.

humansofnewyork:

Seen in the subway.

Unbreakable (ft. Baaba Maal and The Very Best)

Yadi

Unbreakable

Played 0 times

Michigan Avenue, Chicago (couple on street). Chicago, Ilinois, July 1975. (Perry Riddle/National Archives/Records of the Environmental Protection Agency)

Michigan Avenue, Chicago (couple on street). Chicago, Ilinois, July 1975. (Perry Riddle/National Archives/Records of the Environmental Protection Agency)

Zoom Info
  • Camera
  • ISO
  • Aperture
  • Exposure
  • Focal Length
  • Canon EOS 5D Mark II
  • 2000
  • f/1.4
  • 1/50th
  • 50mm

(Source: man-and-camera)

Cig Harvey

Cig Harvey

Children play in the yard of Ruston home, while a Tacoma smelter stack showers the area with arsenic and lead residue. Ruston, Washington, August 1972. (Gene Daniels/National Archives/Records of the Environmental Protection Agency)

Children play in the yard of Ruston home, while a Tacoma smelter stack showers the area with arsenic and lead residue. Ruston, Washington, August 1972. (Gene Daniels/National Archives/Records of the Environmental Protection Agency)

 

 

Jan Grarup/Denmark/Laif - Women’s Basketball, Mogadishu, Somalia - Feb. 21, 2012, Mogadishu, Somalia. The Somali basketball association pays armed guards to watch over and protect Suweys and her team when they play. In Mogadishu, the war-torn capital of Somalia, young women risk their lives to play basketball. Suweys, the 19-year-old captain of a women’s basketball team, and her friends defy radical Islamist views on women’s rights. They have received many death threats from not only al-Shabaab militias and radical Islamists, but some male members of their own families. “I just want to dunk,” said Suweys. It is on the basketball court she feels happiest. “Basketball makes me forget all my problems”

Jan Grarup/Denmark/Laif - Women’s Basketball, Mogadishu, Somalia - Feb. 21, 2012, Mogadishu, Somalia. The Somali basketball association pays armed guards to watch over and protect Suweys and her team when they play. In Mogadishu, the war-torn capital of Somalia, young women risk their lives to play basketball. Suweys, the 19-year-old captain of a women’s basketball team, and her friends defy radical Islamist views on women’s rights. They have received many death threats from not only al-Shabaab militias and radical Islamists, but some male members of their own families. “I just want to dunk,” said Suweys. It is on the basketball court she feels happiest. “Basketball makes me forget all my problems”