EyeEm

Jul 11

ticklr:

Love how your image blurs in the bg of EyeEm interface before upload

Aw thanks! Glad you like that.

ticklr:

Love how your image blurs in the bg of EyeEm interface before upload

Aw thanks! Glad you like that.

Help Beat Cancer with Race For Life

We’re thrilled to announce our cooperation with Race for Life today. The largest women-only fundraising event in the UK, Race for Life gathers women of all ages to come together to walk, jog or run to help beat cancer.

We’ve built a Facebook app for Race for Life that embeds the slideshow of the album Race for Life directly on Facebook. That way participants can share their photos during the races on EyeEm while the whole event is live-streamed via Race for Life’s Facebook page.

Click here to find out how you can help. 

brooklyntheory:

Not Basquiat, Bushwick

brooklyntheory:

Not Basquiat, Bushwick

Jul 10

mishobaranovic:

North Melbourne Library

mishobaranovic:

North Melbourne Library

Let’s see your Thumbs up!

Let’s see your Thumbs up!

Apr 25

EyeEm for WinPhone is Here!

Hooray!

EyeEm is now available for Windows Phone, bringing creative photo-sharing to one of the most compelling mobile platforms out there. With its unique style and simplicity, the Windows Phone interface gives a whole new touch to EyeEm, making it a beautiful experience for WinPhone users worldwide to share their photos and join our community. Read more about it at our blog

Get it now!  |  Forward to a friend

   

Apr 19

Inside Skid Row with Roger Clay

We’re proud to present these powerful images by Roger Clay. Captured in Skid Row, one of the roughest and poorest districts of Los Angeles, these are the stories that Roger has to tell:

My name is Roger Clay and I am an iPhoneographer from the Inland Empire of California . Recently I started traveling into Los Angeles to see the big city and work on some street photography. As I walked around I kept wandering into the Skid Row area of Downtown and found it interesting.

The further I ventured in I saw some awesome characters to photograph. Yes, it is Skid Row full of criminals, drugs and prostitution. But I have managed to photograph some people with great character and beauty.

More photos at our blog

Apr 18

marcelnaumann:

spring in Montreal by marcelnaumann on EyeEm

marcelnaumann:

spring in Montreal by marcelnaumann on EyeEm

Apr 13

The New EyeEm Web Experience

Ladies and Gentlemen,

we’re thrilled to present the new EyeEm web experience! We’ve redesigned our website from top to bottom to offer you the best photo browsing & discovery experience possible. 

Learn more about the new features at our blog.

Stunning photo Robert-Paul Jansen!

Stunning photo Robert-Paul Jansen!

(Source: robertpauljansen)

Photos and Sounds feat. PJ Harvey

Welcome to Photos & Sounds, a series on our blog that’s all about the fascination of listening to our photos. Every week we will handpick a new selection.

blackandwhite at Seattle by mellow longfellow on EyeEm  

Let’s listen to our photos and see our sounds. Slow down and see what story each photo tells. Thanks to The_Real_McCoy for curating this lovely selection. Check out more photos at our blog.

Apr 12

theminimals:

TheMinimals (less edit juxt photography) in Napoli by TheMinimals on EyeEm

theminimals:

TheMinimals (less edit juxt photography) in Napoli by TheMinimals on EyeEm

Apr 05

ioanaloger:

sun at Alexanderplatz by io Analoger on EyeEm

<3

ioanaloger:

sun at Alexanderplatz by io Analoger on EyeEm

<3

Challenges on EyeEm - “Diversity”

ampteam:

Here are just a few of the fantastic submissions to our first weeks Challenges over on EyeEm. This week our theme is “Diversity”. Show us what this word means to you.
To participate just tag your image with the purple “AMPt -Diversity” tag.
We will select a winner from the submissions and feature it here on Sunday.

by Jen Pollack Bianco

by Miriam Weber

by Cedric Blanchon

by Marita

by wheway

by FByteflyer

by Erin Kathleen

by TheMinimals

by Guido

by Micel Ba

Don’t forget to add your photos everybody! Such a great initiative!

“Becoming a MoPho”: An Interview with Greg Schmigel

mophoapp:


By Anton Kawasaki

Sometimes people wonder how the whole mobile photography movement got to the point where it is today — where the iPhone is the most popular camera on Flickr, where millions of people share mobile images online, and where over 10,000 apps for photography exist in the App Store. It’s hard to pinpoint its true origins, but it’s just as hard NOT to think of the “beginning” without mentioning the name Greg Schmigel.

Was Greg the very FIRST person to start regularly taking photos with an iPhone and with a more artistic eye? 

Probably not. 

But he was definitely the first person (that I know of) who created a website devoted strictly to photography using the device — and was probably the first person to start getting some attention for it. So for that reason, he is definitely considered one of the earliest pioneers of “iPhonoegrap…”, er…, ahem — “mobile photography,” I should rather say (see below).

Around the time I was watching Sion Fullana begin to first explore shooting street photography with his own iPhone, we both soon discovered that some guy in Maryland named Greg Schmigel already had a small online presence. We all eventually connected through the online photo-sharing website Flickr, and Schmeegs [as I affectionately call him] became one of our earliest mobile photography allies.
 


          Hair Today

We finally met Greg (and his beautiful wife, Suzy) during one of their many visits to New York City a few years ago, and we all became fast friends. But unlike with many other mobile photography buddies we’ve made over the years since, we’ve never done the traditional “photowalk” experience together. Instead, Greg will devote most of the time that he’s in the city to shooting just by himself (often with Suzy by his side, but sometimes not as she does her own thing). It’s not because he doesn’t want to hang out with friends, but because he’s SO focused and dedicated to his shooting that he can’t afford too many distractions (it’s certainly true — street photographers get their BEST shots when they’re alone). You can’t help but admire his dedication to his craft. In fact, he gets so passionate with his all-day photo taking, that he’ll sometimes wind up with literally thousands of new images in his camera roll by the end of a single night. 

Often Greg won’t even look at (or post-process) his photos until he gets back home to Maryland. It’s a much different approach to mobile photography than Sion and I, or most other mobile shooters that I know, who can’t help but check each photo as it’s taken, and sometimes process AND post a photo we like to an online photo sharing community (like Flickr or Instagram) within minutes. Schmigel keeps it “old school” and often waits — much like we ALL had to do when using film cameras back in the day. Using a mobile device is less about the instant sharing for him, and more about the convenience and ability for getting discreet and up-close shots.

Back in July of last year, Greg e-mailed Sion, myself, and nine other mobile shooters he admired to ask us if we were all interested in participating in an experimental cooperative that would be the mobile equivalent of the well known Magnum Photos group we all admired. We all agreed to join, and soon the Mobile Photo Group was born. We spent several weeks in the beginning going over how the group would work, what our goals would be, etc. We knew the group would have to be limited to a few members at first (despite knowing that would probably receive criticism — and it did), but we were already discussing how to slowly expand over the years. Eventually we decided to keep doing what we do best — take photos — and let whatever collaborations we had in mind grow organically.

While not necessarily the leader of MPG, I figured Greg would be a good person to ask some questions about the group that I felt might still be “hanging in the air.” And of course, I wanted to delve deeper into the mind of the man himself…

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This was a really insightful interview Anton! Nice work.