L☻☻K -- AT -- THIS! #044



Photoshop wizard Cristian Girotto‘s photo series L’Enfant Extérieur (the outer child) takes his subjects’ inner children and brings them, quite literally, to the surface. In the series, Girotto explores what adults would look like if men and women never left the cuteness of infancy — at least in some respects. Each photo, originally captured by photographer Quentin Curtat, shows the subject photoshopped to look like a toddler.



















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 A fashion photographer’s job is, at its most basic level, to draw attention to the clothes he or she has been asked to photograph. But how does one make their fashion shots stand out when there are so many more out there, often bookending your own shoot inside the very magazine you’re featured in?

Montreal-based photographer Martin Tremblay (also known as Pinch) figured out a way to turn fashion photography on its head… he literally turned it on its head!

His Fortune Cookie series features gravity-defying upside down models dressed in finery created by Pascal & Jérémie. In this fictional world Tremblay has created, the model immediately draws the viewer’s eye because they are the one upside down occupant of a right-side-up world.

Perfect example of CONTRAST in art






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The photos you see here are all part of a series called Stage of Mind, by Korean artist Lee JeeYoung. Each scene — from the realistic to the surreal — was created without any photo manipulation whatsoever. These “excerpts from her heart, her memory, or her dreams” often take months to capture from start to finish, because all of the decorations have to be created by hand. They are all created inside her small studio (sized at 12 x 13.5 x 8 feet) Since she uses the same space over and over, each creation must be dismantled before she can create her next piece.