fosstodon.org is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
Fosstodon is an invite only Mastodon instance that is open to those who are interested in technology; particularly free & open source software. If you wish to join, contact us for an invite.

Administered by:

Server stats:

8.6K
active users

#noirblanc

0 posts0 participants0 posts today
Voilà, je profite aussi de faire une nouvelle #introduction sur ma nouvelle instance pixelfed.ch

Je suis #photographe et #graphiste #autodidacte. Sur ce compte, vous verrez principalement des photos prise en infrarouge, du #noirblanc de rue ou de reportage,
des photo de #concerts et peu être un peu de graphisme.
____
La photo infrarouge d'un bosquet prise à la #valléedejoux
#landscape #infrared #infrarouge #mastoart #metal #photographie #introductionfr #pixelfed

South Street (1980-1985)

Photographs from a book by Barbara Mensch.

In the early 1980s Mensch moved into a 19th-century warehouse just steps from the waterfront and the Fulton Fish Market. Her move coincided with proposals to develop the waterfront threatening the existence of the Market. These are photographs of the men working in that disappearing world.

The Orange Line

Chinatown to Jamaica Plain

The old elevated section of Boston’s Orange Line, built in 1901, ran from Boston’s Chinatown Station to the area known as Jamaica Plain. The people who lived along the route did not have to worry about rising rents where no one else wanted to live. It was a thriving working-class and low-income community.

In 1985 sections of the Orange Line were scheduled to be demolished and rerouted threatening change in these communities. Photographer Jack Lueders-Booth captured the area’s residents in his photo series Chinatown to Jamaica Plain, and his 2022 book The Orange Line, before these changes came to pass.

American Geography

Between 2014 and 2020, photographer Matt Black traveled to hundreds of high poverty communities across the United States, concentrating on areas with poverty rates above 20%. He discovered that he could travel from coast to coast without ever crossing above this poverty line, through 46 states.

American Geography

Between 2014 and 2020, photographer Matt Black traveled to hundreds of high poverty communities across the United States, concentrating on areas with poverty rates above 20%. He discovered that he could travel from coast to coast without ever crossing above this poverty line, through 46 states.

American Geography

Between 2014 and 2020, photographer Matt Black traveled to hundreds of high poverty communities across the United States, concentrating on areas with poverty rates above 20%. He discovered that he could travel from coast to coast without ever crossing above this poverty line, through 46 states.

My aunt Juliette

A Photo Series from Denis Dailleux

In his childhood village lived an elderly woman and a true character: his great-aunt Juliette. Their unique bond seems to have stimulated creativity in both - daring each other to push the limits further. A cat and mouse game of muse inspring muse …