Long Weekend on 35mm
๐ท Minolta STR Supr x ๐๏ธ Fujifilm C200
#filmphotography #35mm
Posts by MiroMiro
Help break the silence in Iran!
If you have a Windows PC or Mac at home, you can help by running a Psiphon Conduit, which acts as a bridge to keep people connected during blackouts. Apparently over 18 million users in Iran have downloaded Psiphon to bypass the regime's censorship.ย
๐๐
Surfing in Vietnam ๐ป๐ณ
#photography #vietnam
7/
Every option comes with a catch. Too expensive. Too social. Too clunky. Too suspicious.
So I'm asking genuinely โ what are you actually using? Any hidden gems that balance quality and price without making you feel like you're compromising one for the other? I'd love to know.
6/
Capture One gets other parts right. Film emulations that actually look good โ the kind VSCO and AgBr do well. Nobody's put it all together at a sane price.
5/
My wishlist isn't complicated. Native folder-based catalogue navigation. Clean, essential editing and masking tools without the bloat. Solid RAW processing. Film emulations that actually look good. And straightforward, high-quality export. That's it. Photomator gets some of it right.
4/
I've poked around Digikam - the interface is rough, and the workflow isn't smooth. Affinity Photo recently went free, which sounds generous until you realise it's probably just a warm-up for a future paid model.
3/
I'm not interested in Lightroom's forever subscription. CaptureOne is arguably the best tool out there, but it's priced for working professionals, not hobbyists.
2/
After Apple acquired Pixelmator and Photomator, updates quietly stalled. VSCO used to be great โ now it feels more like a social platform cosplaying as an editor. You can't even export your edited work in full quality. What's the point?
The Photo Editing Software Problem Nobody's Really Solved. (๐งต)
1/ Finding good, affordable photo editing software is getting genuinely frustrating.
#photography #photoediting #phototools
"urban scenes of a city on the edge of desolation"
๐ Cuiabรก, MT, Brasil.
#artistsofbluesky #blackandwhite #blackandwhitephotography #blueskyphotographers #objkt #nftphotography #photographersofbluesky #streetphotography #tezos #urbanphotography
A painterly sheep from Iceland ๐ฎ๐ธ
#iceland #naturephotography #fujifilm #thephotohour #eastcoastkin
"weaving_light_001"
2/10
9 tez
objkt.com/tokens/KT1VJ...
Days at the Beach
#photography
ZAUBERWALD
We are all lost wanderers in this world, drifting through shifting light, caught between memory and dream.
Photography | LE | 5 xtz
#photography
urbandances #03
objkt.com/tokens/KT1Ud...
Sunset from above the clouds.
#photography #sunset
Study on the Selective Use of the Colour Yellow in photography
#photography
I can relate to it. It requires a lot of self-discipline. Nice to meet you and happy to connect.
Collecting is a journey, not a destination. Itโs about the pieces that make you stop and think.
Which NFT in your collection still makes you stop and look today? Drop a link or a screenshot below! ๐
5/ Look beyond the hype
Don't chase limited editions or trending PFPs simply because they're scarce or popular. The rarest piece means nothing if it doesn't speak to you. Build a collection that reflects your taste, not market speculation.
4/ Reject the asset mindset
Refuse to treat art purely as an investment vehicle. Crypto-art emerged from a desire to democratize creativity and challenge traditional gatekeepers. Honor that ethos. Collect to support artists and preserve culture, not to flip for profit.
3/ Display your digital art
Your NFT art deserves more than being hidden in the depths of your crypto wallet. Find creative ways to display it. Tools like @whitewallsapp can help you showcase your collection beautifully.
Art hidden is art wasted.
Art by @radarboy3000
2/ Collect what resonates
The most important criterion is simple: does this work speak to you? Your collection should bring joy, provoke thought, or stir emotion. If it doesn't move you, don't collect it.
Art by MoriYuzan
1/ Build depth through diversity
Cultivate an extensive collection by exploring different genresโphotography, glitch art, and generative works. Let curiosity guide your curation, not conformity.
Here is my philosophy and approach to building a meaningful collection in five principles: