With the long weekend ahead of us, we’ve got a special Wednesday edition of Friday Links for you. Meanwhile, if you’ve put together a highlight reel of your work from 2015, don’t forget to let us know and we’ll link to it through the end of the year. And while you’re at it, take the opportunity to enter the 10th annual Exposed DC photography contest!
- Meet some of the newest babies born in 2015 at the National Zoo and Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute.
- National Geographic points out that 2015 was a big year for photos and videos of animals riding other animals.
- The Hollywood Reporter says that the rest of the Star Wars franchise will be shot on Kodak film, in a trend that’s moving back towards film recording. Kodak closed its last motion picture lab last year, but is expanding its capabilities with other labs to fulfill the requests.
- Behind the scenes at The Nutcracker. Photographer Grigory Dukor documented Nacho Duato’s production of the Christmas classic at the Mikhailovsky Theatre in St Petersburg, Russia.
- Belgian photographer Pascal Mannaerts has captured a series of images of the Tsaatan people, a Mongolian tribe who depend entirely on reindeer.
- Norman Rockwell created paintings that defined a generation, but the photographs that helped make them are just as fascinating.
- Yener Torun’s Instagram feed of photographs of minimalist buildings around Istanbul is phenomenal.
- A professor at Texas A&M University posted this series of photos to Facebook. “There has been a dead cockroach in the Anthropology building’s stairwell for at least two weeks. Some enterprising person has now made her a little shrine.”
- Shōji Ueda was known as a “sedentary adventurer,” spending much of his life shooting the sand dunes right by his house. But when the Japanese master photographer died, 5,000 unseen pictures came to light in what the Guardian calls “the most beautiful, surprising photobook of the year.”
- For 20 years, Thomas Alleman kept, but never opened, a box filled with negatives. They documented the eight years Alleman spent photographing his family between the ages of 24 and 32, centered around the deterioration of his mother’s health.
- “At first glance, the indigenous Bolivian women don’t look much like mountain climbers, with their colorful, multilayered skirts and fringed shawls.” A photo essay on Bolivian cholita mountain climbers by AP photographer Juan Karita.
- The Guardian has chosen Yannis Behrakis of Reuters as their agency photographer of the year. They share what they describe as “the most astonishing moments he captured in two of the biggest stories of 2015 – the refugee crisis and the financial implosion in his home country Greece.”
- Many of Satoki Nagata’s images might seem to be multiple exposures or to have been manipulated in post-production, but all are single exposures of Chicago’s nighttime.
- “The Cat Photographer” totally earned his title. For the past 70 years, 95-year-old Walter Chandoha has made a career out of photographing cats for both editorial and commercial purposes.
- An insanely cute baby sea otter was born unexpectedly at Monterey Bay Aquarium tide pool.