Thursday, January 24, 2013

The pictures we love best

 

 

The pictures we love best:

  • Flickr Commons celebrates fifth anniversary of 'public domain' collection
  • Marks event by showing off its most viewed and commented on pictures
  • Images range from famous historic photographs to personal pictures

It features everything from iconic images of some of the most famous figures in history to heartwarming private pictures of ordinary people and animals simply posing up for the camera.

Flickr Commons has celebrated its fifth anniversary by showing off a collection of its most viewed and commented on photographs, including a picture of Winston Churchill at a meeting of Allied leaders during WWII and a photograph of a black dog smoking a pipe in Wales.

The website's collection of 'public domain' photographs was first launched on January 16, 2008 with 1,500 pictures, and has expanded rapidly since, now featuring more than 250,000.

Winston Churchill (front, left) with President Roosevelt and Stalin at the Yalta Conference during WWII

Among the eye-catching images in the Flickr Commons collection is this iconic photo of Winston Churchill with President Roosevelt and Stalin at the Yalta Conference during WWII

Dog smoking a pipe

Ship's cats

The images include personal photographs such as this one (left) of a dog smoking a pipe in Wales during the 1940s and a picture of a ship's cats, on the Royal Navy vessel HMS Hawkins (right)

Fighter: This image shows US Navy Lieutenant Luke Kremer piloting his F/A-18 C fighter plane over Key West, in Florida

US Navy Lieutenant Luke Kremer piloting his F/A-18 C fighter plane over Key West, in Florida

Variety: Sponge diver John Gonatos is captured in this image off the coast of Florida in 1945

A space rocket being launched features the signatures of the 'Mercury Seven' astronauts who were specially selected by NASA in 1959

Sponge diver John Gonatos is captured in this image off the coast of Florida in 1945 (left); right, a space rocket being launched features the signatures of the 'Mercury Seven' astronauts who were specially selected by NASA in 1959

A ring-tailed possum examines an Australian Department of Information movie camera

A ring-tailed possum examines an Australian Department of Information movie camera

The collection was found initially through a partnership with the US Library of Congress, with the key goal showing the 'hidden treasures in the world's public photography archives.'

Flickr also allows the public to input any facts about the images they may have about each of the images.The collection has come from 56 different libraries, archives, and museums around the world. Among the highlights of the collection are an image of two cats posing for the camera at the end of a gun barrel on a Royal Navy cruiser, a photgraph of Elvis Presley meeting President Richard Nixon at the White House in 1970 and a picture of a soldier catching some sleep in the trenches during World War I.

Memories: This picture of a baby and a dog on a sailing ship taken was taken by Sydney photographer Sam Hood. He took hundreds of photographs of ships and their crew as souvenirs of their visit

This picture of a baby and a dog on a sailing ship taken was taken by Sydney photographer Samuel J Hood. He took hundreds of photographs of ships and their crew as souvenirs of their visit

Friends - hitchhiker and his dog

Flight attendants

A hitchhiker is pictured holding his dog in Colorado (left) while these flight attendants (right) look pretty in pink

Fame: US president Richard Nixon greets Elvis Presley at the White House in 1970

US president Richard Nixon greets Elvis Presley at the White House in 1970

The crofter Karl Oskar Lööw in Fredhäll. Born in 1873.

Australian soldier

Swedish crofter Karl Oskar Lööw (left) taken in 1933. The unidentified soldier (right) was part of the First Australian Imperial Force during WWI

Cold landing: A woman prepares to dive into a stream next to a glacier in Mount Rainier National Park, in Washington state

A woman prepares to dive into a stream next to a glacier in Mount Rainier National Park, in Washington state

Canada Dock in Liverpool, 1909. The gentleman in uniform is RMS Mauretania's first Chief Engineer, John Currie

Canada Dock in Liverpool, 1909. The gentleman in uniform is RMS Mauretania's first Chief Engineer, John Currie

Other startling pictures include a man riding a one wheeled motorcycle in Holland during the 1930s, a Swedish farmer sporting an huge beard and a blind man holding a skeleton.

Some of the best of the collection are images of every day life, from the locksmith going about his business in a London street during the 1870s, to an Allied soldier playing with his pet kangaroo in Australia during WWII.

The collection was a mixture of colour and black and white photographs taken throughout the 20th Century.

This city letter carrier in the US posed for a humorous photograph with a young boy in his mailbag

This city letter carrier in the US posed for a humorous photograph with a young boy in his mailbag

Weary: A soldier is watched by his comrades as he sleeps in the trenches in France during WWI

A soldier is watched by his comrades as he sleeps in the trenches in France during WWI. The image reflects the basic conditions soldiers were forced to endure

One wheeled motorcycle - pictured here in Holland in 1931

A blind man is pictured 'seeing' through touch of a skeleton at Sunderland Museum in 1913

A one-wheeled motorcycle - pictured here in Holland in 1931 (left) while the photograph, right, shows a blind man 'seeing' through touch by holding a skeleton in 1913

Intelligence: The familiar figure of famed physicist Albert Einstein can be seen here among other VIPs during a meeting in 1931

Physicist Albert Einstein can be seen here among other VIPs during a meeting in 1931

The London School of Economics' Women's Hockey Team poses for the camera in this shot from the 1920s

The London School of Economics' Women's Hockey Team poses for the camera in this shot from the 1920s

An Allied soldier takes time out to play with his pet kangaroo in Australia in 1942

An Allied soldier takes time out to play with his pet kangaroo in Australia in 1942

A group of children are hoisted in a crate on board HMAS Canberra in December 1931

A group of children are hoisted in a crate on board HMAS Canberra in December 1931

Among the most colourful were a photograph of a group of flight attendants all dressed in pink and an image of a US Navy jet flying over the coast of Florida.

A Flickr spokesperson said the collection aimed to celebrate 'the wonderful diversity and quality of Flickr Commons photos.;

They said Flickr had asked Commons member institutions to send it links 'to a few of their most viewed, commented, or favourite images' to create the gallery.

'The Eagle Nebula': The colourful picture shows a star-forming region about 7,000 light years from Earth

'The Eagle Nebula': This colourful picture shows 'a star-forming region' about 7,000 light years from Earth

Sweet: The family of a Mrs Murdoch taken in County Tipperary, Ireland in 1905

The 'Street Locksmith' from 'Street life in London' (1877)by photographer John Thomson and Adolphe Smith

The family of a Mrs Murdoch taken in County Tipperary, Ireland in 1905 (left). Right, 'The Street Locksmith' from 'Street life in London' (1877) by photographer John Thomson and Adolphe Smith

A submarine in the Thames near Tower Bridge, London in 1919

A submarine in the Thames near Tower Bridge, London in 1919. U-Boats caused havoc for British shipping during WWI

Victorious: A group of British soldiers celebrate in this photograph from WWI called 'Tommy enjoys possession of newly captured Hun trench'

A group of British soldiers celebrate in this photograph from WWI called 'Tommy enjoys possession of newly captured Hun trench'

Spectacular setting: Members of the first American team to reach the summit of Mount Everest are seen making their ascent through the snow in 1963

Spectacular setting: Members of the first American team to reach the summit of Nepal's Mount Everest are seen making their ascent through the snow in 1963

Rare creature: The spirit bear - or Kermode bear - is a variant of the North American black bear that has white fur

Rare creature: The spirit bear - or Kermode bear - is a variant of the North American black bear that has white fur, like this creature photographed feasting on salmon in the Great Bear Rainforest in British Columbia in 2010

Landmark: In this iconic 1938 image, three figures astride camels behold the majesty of the Great Sphinx and the pyramids of Giza, Egypt

Landmark: In this iconic 1938 image, three figures astride camels behold the majesty of the Great Sphinx and the pyramids of Giza, Egypt

Men gathered in a bazaar in Herat, Afghanistan, in 1931  

  • National Geographic is celebrating 125 years dedicated to exploration, education, and conservation
  • From the famous 'Afghan Girl', to three men dwarfed by Egypt's majestic pyramids in 1938, National Geographic has brought us some of the world's most recognisable images

From the world's mightiest and most elusive creatures, to spectacular landscapes in the farthest flung corners of the globe, National Geographic has been capturing the wonder and diversity of our planet and its inhabitants for more than a century.

The publication is now celebrating its landmark 125th anniversary with a showcase of some of the most iconic and recognizable images to have graced its pages over the years.

The stunning series of photographs span decades and continents, from a trio of men on camels in the shadow of Egypt's pyramids in 1938, to the arresting beauty of a young Afghan refugee captured on camera in Pakistan in 1985.

King of the jungle: A mighty lion finds a place for a nap amid the branches of a tree in Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda, where the creatures are often spotted sleeping high above the ground in fig trees

King of the jungle: A mighty lion finds a place for a nap amid the branches of a tree in Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda, where the creatures are often spotted sleeping high above the ground in fig trees. Founded in 1888, the National Geographic Society is one of the largest non-profit scientific and educational institutions in the world.It has funded more than 10,000 scientific research, conservation and exploration projects around the globe. Having started out as a scholarly journal in the 19th Century, the magazine has evolved into a publication that shines a spotlight on distant corners of the globe for millions of readers, with its combination of breathtaking photography and on-the-ground reporting.

Steve McCurry's photograph of young Afghan refugee Sharbat Gula is perhaps the image most associated with National Geographic.

Sharbat, whose piercing green eyes captured the attention of the globe when her solemn face appeared on the cover of the magazine in 1985, was around 12-years-old and living in Pakistan when the picture was taken during Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.

For years she was known simply as 'the Afghan Girl', until the photograph's striking subject was formally identified in 2002.

A look back through the National Geographic photo archives offers a glimpse into landmark moments in the history of countries around the world.

One 1963 image features two members of the first U.S. team to reach the summit of Mount Everest trudging through the dazzling white snow as they make their ascent.

The American expedition was sponsored in part by the National Geographic Society, and pioneered a new route to the summit of one of the world's most daunting peaks.

But it is not always humans that feature in the journal's most spectacular photographs.

In many of National Geographic's stunning pictures, it is animals, not people, that take centre stage.

Photographer Paul Nicklen managed to capture a rare 'spirit bear' enjoying a feast of salmon in the rainforest in British Columbia in 2010.

Also known as the Kermode bear, the elusive creature is a variant of the North American Black Bear that is born with white fur.

Another picture reveals an enormous lion, lit up in the African dusk, stares down the lens of the camera as it prepares to bed down for a sleep amid the branches of a fig tree in Uganda's Queen Elizabeth National Park.

One heart-warming photograph, which captures a fleeting moment of contact between Jane Goodall and a baby chimpanzee, reveals the bond that can exist between animals and humans.

Photographer Hugo Van Lawick snapped the photograph as the chimp, which was named Flint, reached out to Jane at Gombe Stream National Park in western Tanzania.

Now 78, British primatologist Jane famously spent 45 years studying the interactions of wild chimpanzees in Tanzania.

Spectacular setting: Members of the first American team to reach the summit of Mount Everest are seen making their ascent through the snow in 1963

Spectacular setting: Members of the first American team to reach the summit of Nepal's Mount Everest are seen making their ascent through the snow in 1963

Landmark: In this iconic 1938 image, three figures astride camels behold the majesty of the Great Sphinx and the pyramids of Giza, Egypt

Landmark: In this iconic 1938 image, three figures astride camels behold the majesty of the Great Sphinx and the pyramids of Giza, Egypt

Men gathered in a bazaar in Herat, Afghanistan, in 1931

Steve McCurry's iconic image of the 'Afghan Girl'

Frozen in history: This shot of Afghan men gathered at a bazaar in Herat in 1931, left, was photo-journalist Maynard Owen-Williams' favourite image, while the piercing eyes of refugee Sharbat Gula, right, for years known only as the 'Afghan Girl', captured the attention of the world when they featured on the cover of the magazine in 1985

Visible bond: Primatologist Jane Goodall and tiny chimpanzee Flint share a touching moment at Gombe Stream Reserve in Tanzania, East Africa. The fleeting scene was captured on camera in 1964

Visible bond: Primatologist Jane Goodall and tiny chimpanzee Flint share a touching moment at Gombe Stream Reserve in Tanzania, East Africa. The fleeting scene was captured on camera in 1964

The ice maiden: The 500-year-old mummy of a young Inca girl was unearthed on Mount Ampato in Peru in 1995 by archaeologist and National Geographic explorer-in-residence Johan Reinhard

The ice maiden: The 500-year-old mummy of a young Inca girl was unearthed on Mount Ampato in Peru in 1995 by archaeologist and National Geographic explorer-in-residence Johan Reinhard

Take-off: The National Geographic-Army Air Corps balloon, Explorer II, prepares to take to the skies over South Dakota, U.S., in 1935

A colossal stone head discovered in Tabasco, Mexico, in 1938

More than a century of exploration: The National Geographic-Army Air Corps balloon, Explorer II, prepares to take to the skies over South Dakota, U.S., in 1935, left, while the image on the right shows one of 11 colossal stone heads discovered in Mexico in 1938 during an expedition led by archaeologist Matthew Stirling

This past year has been rich in memorable images, the best among them capturing the essence of the human experience and nature at its most powerful.

Like every year, National Geographic Magazine has compiled the most evocative images of 2012 into one impressive gallery which showcases traditions of indigenous peoples from around the world, the underwater life of marine mammals and natural phenomena. 

One photo taken in a remote Russian community shows a father, Aidyng Kyrgys, caressing his newborn baby girl, whom he lovingly refers to as 'my little goat' in the ancient but dying Tuvan language which only has 223,000 speakers.

Another image, taken closer to home on a Native American reservation, shows a member of the Oglala Lakota tribe squeezed into the back of a car for the journey home along with used clothing donated by an Indian charity that seek to help those in need in the community.

On the Pine Ridge Indian reservation in South Dakota, a photographer captured a shaman performing an ancient ritual involving a long-nosed white mask as he burns sage for purification.  

Among the images in the Best of 2012 – National Geographic Magazine Photos of the Year slideshow is an awe-inspiring photo taken in California's Sierra Nevada depicting a majestic, snow-covered 3,200-year-old sequoia called the President which measures 247 feet in height and has the widest crown in the forest.

Photographer Paul Nicklen was lucky to snap a picture of Emperor penguins just a tenth of a second before they got spooked and took off, leaving only bubbles in their wake.

Awe-inspiring: A dying tornado like this one depicted in July is said to be in the 'roping out' phase

Awe-inspiring: A dying tornado like this one depicted in July is said to be in the 'roping out' phase

Majestic: Cloaked in the snows of California's Sierra Nevada, the 3,200-year-old giant sequoia called the President rises 247 feet

Majestic: Cloaked in the snows of California's Sierra Nevada, the 3,200-year-old giant sequoia called the President rises 247 feet

Swift: A school of Emperor penguins swimming away in a flurry of bubbles after being spooked by a photographer

Swift: A school of Emperor penguins swimming away in a flurry of bubbles after being spooked by a photographer

Dying language: Aidyng Kyrgys caresses his newborn baby girl, whom he refers to using a Tuvan term of endearment: anayim, or 'my little goat'

Dying language: Aidyng Kyrgys caresses his newborn baby girl, whom he refers to using a Tuvan term of endearment: anayim, or 'my little goat'

Ancient ritual: Stanley Good Voice Elk, a heyoka on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, burns sage to ritually purify his surroundings while using a mask to channel the power of a spirit

Ancient ritual: Stanley Good Voice Elk, a heyoka on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota, burns sage to ritually purify his surroundings while using a mask to channel the power of a spirit

National Geographic announced their 2011 global-wide photography contest awarding not only a warm financial prize to its three winners but world-wide publication in their magazine.

The winners were taken from digital submissions on three categories of people, places and nature while judged by three National Geographic photographers.

The judges gave equal weight to both creativity and photographic quality when the deciding the winners, including the grand prize, first place winner to a photo of a dragonfly.

Winner: Splashing, the grand prize winning photo as well as Nature category winner, was taken in the city of Batam in Indonesia's Riau Islands

Winner: Splashing, the grand prize winning photo as well as Nature category winner, was taken in the city of Batam in Indonesia's Riau Islands

The water flinging dragonfly photo titled Splashing, was captured by Shikhei Goh, a photographer in Indonesia's Riau Islands while they were both caught in a sudden downpour.

It was described as a 'very striking macrophotography image that rose to the top of the nature category for me because of its originality, beautiful light, rare action in a close-up image, as well as its technical perfection,' according to judge Tim Laman to the National Geographic.

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According to judge Peter Essick, he said that the photograph gave the insect 'character us humans can relate to.'

'It's rare indeed to see a photograph that causes the viewer to feel a bond with a member of the animal world seemingly,' Mr Essick told the magazine, 'but maybe not, so unlike our own.'

Glowing: Blue Pond & First Snow, by Kent Shiraishi, captured a famous tourist resort in Japan for the nature category's honorable mention as the hot spring ripples below white-frosted trees

Glowing: Blue Pond & First Snow, by Kent Shiraishi, captured a famous tourist resort in Japan for the nature category's honorable mention as the hot spring ripples below white-frosted trees

Floating: The Sunrising Jellyfish, by Angel Fitor, received honorable mention in nature as it's caught just beneath the water's surface in Murcia province, Spain

Floating: The Sunrising Jellyfish, by Angel Fitor, received honorable mention in nature as it's caught just beneath the water's surface in Murcia province, Spain

Running: Photo, Panic in the Pan, by Marius Coetzee was taken during a safari in Tanzania's Serengeti National Park at a watering hole

Running: Photo, Panic in the Pan, by Marius Coetzee was taken during a safari in Tanzania's Serengeti National Park at a watering hole

Chase: Photo, The Hunt, by Stefano Pesarelli received honorable mention for its natural use of panning and balance in its capture of a scene at the Masai Mara National Reserve in Kenya

Chase: Photo, The Hunt, by Stefano Pesarelli received honorable mention for its natural use of panning and balance in its capture of a scene at the Masai Mara National Reserve in Kenya

In the places category, a photo titled Into the Green Zone won for its capture of a rainbow bending over a smooth ocean at the Philippines' Onuk Island.

According to Mr Laman, the photographer George Tapan 'showed a perfect sense of timing and composition in the way he captured the two small human subjects in this beautiful scene, and that really made the shot.'

Mr Essick noted his captivation of the woman's hair over her shoulder as it, 'fills a fraction of the picture's real estate, but by capturing the movement at the apex, the photographer has documented a sense of style and flair.

'Small things can sometimes make a big difference,' he finished.

Winner: Into the Green Zone, by George Tapan, captured a rainbow after the rain at the Palawan Islands in the Philippines, winning the category of Places

Winner: Into the Green Zone, by George Tapan, captured a rainbow after the rain at the Palawan Islands in the Philippines, winning the category of Places

Jumping: Photo, Sulfuric Fire Festival, by Hung-Hsiu Shih received honorable mention for its capture of fire fishing in Taipei

Jumping: Photo, Sulfuric Fire Festival, by Hung-Hsiu Shih received honorable mention for its capture of fire fishing in Taipei

Flying: Flying Kites, by Felipe Carvalho, received honorable mention for its capture of a kite battle at the Santa Marta ghetto in Rio de Janeiro which for many years were used to alert drug dealers of approaching enemies

Flying: Flying Kites, by Felipe Carvalho, received honorable mention for its capture of a kite battle at the Santa Marta ghetto in Rio de Janeiro which for many years were used to alert drug dealers of approaching enemies

Falling: Anuar Patjane's Cyber Monsoon received honorable mention for its capture of a torrential monsoon rain in Bhaktapur, Nepal

Falling: Anuar Patjane's Cyber Monsoon received honorable mention for its capture of a torrential monsoon rain in Bhaktapur, Nepal

Soaring: Waterway to Orbit, by James Vernacotola, displays the Space shuttle Endeavour flying into orbit over the Intracoastal Waterway in Ponte Vedra, Florida

Soaring: Waterway to Orbit, by James Vernacotola, displays the Space shuttle Endeavour flying into orbit over the Intracoastal Waterway in Ponte Vedra, Florida

For the category of People, a photo titled The Fjellman Family by Izabelle Nordfjell captures a Swedish reindeer hunter seeking food for his family using a rifle.

According to judge Amy Toensing, the photo captured a quick moment 'real and mysterious at the same time.'

'In the Sami culture,' Mr Essick added, referring to the hunter, 'these events are repeated many times every year, even though they are never quite the same. However, by using a careful composition and skillful timing, the photographer made this one encounter with a Sami hunter memorable.'

Winner: People category winner titled The Fjellman Family, by Izabelle Nordfjell, describes in one shot, literally and physically, one method of feeding a family in northern Sweden before a long winter

Winner: People category winner titled The Fjellman Family, by Izabelle Nordfjell, describes in one shot, literally and physically, one method of feeding a family in northern Sweden before a long winter

 

 

 

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