s:
1. American History Ink
2. World History Ink
3. Jamestown's American Portraits
I have copies of the "Ink" series if you want to borrow one, just let me know.
RRG:)…
s:
1. American History Ink
2. World History Ink
3. Jamestown's American Portraits
I have copies of the "Ink" series if you want to borrow one, just let me know.
RRG:)…
twentieth century's most respected journalists, editors, and
photographers—from Eddie Adams, Neil Leifer, Dirck Halstead, and David
Hume Kennerly, to David Burnett, Gregory Heisler, Matt Mahurin, James
Nachtwey, and Diana Walker, who together won more major photo awards for
Time than all other publications combined. This volume explores Time's
documentation of seminal moments in history, including the moon
landing, the Kennedy assassination, Vietnam, the Gulf War, and September
11th. It investigates the reasons behind Time's "Man of the
Year," transitions in design, the creation of the symbolic red frame,
the important designers and illustrators, the covering of both hot and
soft news, as well as the magazine's changeover to the 21st century and
the creation of Time's international editions…
twentieth century's most respected journalists, editors, and
photographers—from Eddie Adams, Neil Leifer, Dirck Halstead, and David
Hume Kennerly, to David Burnett, Gregory Heisler, Matt Mahurin, James
Nachtwey, and Diana Walker, who together won more major photo awards for
Time than all other publications combined. This volume explores Time's
documentation of seminal moments in history, including the moon
landing, the Kennedy assassination, Vietnam, the Gulf War, and September
11th. It investigates the reasons behind Time's "Man of the
Year," transitions in design, the creation of the symbolic red frame,
the important designers and illustrators, the covering of both hot and
soft news, as well as the magazine's changeover to the 21st century and
the creation of Time's international editions.…
(from Amazon)
If every picture tells a story, every slide tells an even deeper one. Tucked away in Sports Illustrated's photo archive sits 50 years worth of film, a frame-by-frame depiction of the history of sports over the last half a century. The stickers and scribbles along a single slide's border are like tags on a streamer trunk, telling the story of that photo's journey from the playing field to the magazine. This book selects the most colorful of these slides and presents the mounts as objects of art in an oversized 176-page collection, complete with behind-the-scenes vignettes of how the shots came to be. Some slides capture classic SI cover images (Dwight Clark's catch in the 1982 NFC Championship Game or Brandi Chastain ripping her shirt off at the 1999 World Cup) while others are simply great photos (Pete Rose running at full speed or Joe Namath lounging poolside before Super Bowl III). The images themselves are iconic, but by seeing them as slides you get that extra step back. You can see the history that has been made from these flashes of an instant.
From here you can sample the book at SI.com with their slide show... see:
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/multimedia/photo_gallery/0904/si.book.slide.show/content.11.html…
(from Amazon)
If every picture tells a story, every slide tells an even deeper one. Tucked away in Sports Illustrated's photo archive sits 50 years worth of film, a frame-by-frame depiction of the history of sports over the last half a century. The stickers and scribbles along a single slide's border are like tags on a streamer trunk, telling the story of that photo's journey from the playing field to the magazine. This book selects the most colorful of these slides and presents the mounts as objects of art in an oversized 176-page collection, complete with behind-the-scenes vignettes of how the shots came to be. Some slides capture classic SI cover images (Dwight Clark's catch in the 1982 NFC Championship Game or Brandi Chastain ripping her shirt off at the 1999 World Cup) while others are simply great photos (Pete Rose running at full speed or Joe Namath lounging poolside before Super Bowl III). The images themselves are iconic, but by seeing them as slides you get that extra step back. You can see the history that has been made from these flashes of an instant.
From here you can sample the book at SI.com with their slide show... see:
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/multimedia/photo_gallery/0904/si.book.slide.show/content.11.html…
(from Amazon)
If every picture tells a story, every slide tells an even deeper one. Tucked away in Sports Illustrated's photo archive sits 50 years worth of film, a frame-by-frame depiction of the history of sports over the last half a century. The stickers and scribbles along a single slide's border are like tags on a streamer trunk, telling the story of that photo's journey from the playing field to the magazine. This book selects the most colorful of these slides and presents the mounts as objects of art in an oversized 176-page collection, complete with behind-the-scenes vignettes of how the shots came to be. Some slides capture classic SI cover images (Dwight Clark's catch in the 1982 NFC Championship Game or Brandi Chastain ripping her shirt off at the 1999 World Cup) while others are simply great photos (Pete Rose running at full speed or Joe Namath lounging poolside before Super Bowl III). The images themselves are iconic, but by seeing them as slides you get that extra step back. You can see the history that has been made from these flashes of an instant.
From here you can sample the book at SI.com with their slide show... see:
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/multimedia/photo_gallery/0904/si.book.slide.show/content.11.html…
(from Amazon)
If every picture tells a story, every slide tells an even deeper one. Tucked away in Sports Illustrated's photo archive sits 50 years worth of film, a frame-by-frame depiction of the history of sports over the last half a century. The stickers and scribbles along a single slide's border are like tags on a streamer trunk, telling the story of that photo's journey from the playing field to the magazine. This book selects the most colorful of these slides and presents the mounts as objects of art in an oversized 176-page collection, complete with behind-the-scenes vignettes of how the shots came to be. Some slides capture classic SI cover images (Dwight Clark's catch in the 1982 NFC Championship Game or Brandi Chastain ripping her shirt off at the 1999 World Cup) while others are simply great photos (Pete Rose running at full speed or Joe Namath lounging poolside before Super Bowl III). The images themselves are iconic, but by seeing them as slides you get that extra step back. You can see the history that has been made from these flashes of an instant.
From here you can sample the book at SI.com with their slide show... see:
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/multimedia/photo_gallery/0904/si.book.slide.show/content.11.html…
(from Amazon)
If every picture tells a story, every slide tells an even deeper one. Tucked away in Sports Illustrated's photo archive sits 50 years worth of film, a frame-by-frame depiction of the history of sports over the last half a century. The stickers and scribbles along a single slide's border are like tags on a streamer trunk, telling the story of that photo's journey from the playing field to the magazine. This book selects the most colorful of these slides and presents the mounts as objects of art in an oversized 176-page collection, complete with behind-the-scenes vignettes of how the shots came to be. Some slides capture classic SI cover images (Dwight Clark's catch in the 1982 NFC Championship Game or Brandi Chastain ripping her shirt off at the 1999 World Cup) while others are simply great photos (Pete Rose running at full speed or Joe Namath lounging poolside before Super Bowl III). The images themselves are iconic, but by seeing them as slides you get that extra step back. You can see the history that has been made from these flashes of an instant.
From here you can sample the book at SI.com with their slide show... see:
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/multimedia/photo_gallery/0904/si.book.slide.show/content.11.html…