6 Self-Portraits Of Andy Warhol Dressed In Drag
Warhol enjoyed partying in drag and eventually teamed up with his assistant, Christopher Makos, to create a series of portraits of himself dressed as a woman.
Warhol enjoyed partying in drag and eventually teamed up with his assistant, Christopher Makos, to create a series of portraits of himself dressed as a woman.
The actress looks vintage and dreamy in a new campaign for the clothing brand.
A Kickstarter project by The Impossible Project is reviving Polaroid images for iPhone users.
Instagram built a billion-dollar empire on Polaroid’s aesthetic. Now, amazingly, the 75-year-old company is worshipping at its altar with an app.
For now, it’s just a figment of someone’s imagination from ADR Studio. The world is long overdue for a super sleek version of the Polaroid camera. (via highsnobiety.com)
I spent a few days in Zucotti Park, getting to know the occupiers and taking some photographs with my 320 Land Camera. Here are just a few of the things people are doing at #occupywallstreet. View List ›
Rupert Grint and Tom Felton get their pose on in this hip Polaroid photo shoot for the Band of Outsiders fashion label. (via styleite.com) View List ›
Lady Gaga is Polaroid’s new creative director is Lady Gaga, so we get weird stuff like sunglasses that take pictures. Here she is demonstrating the future glasses at CES in Las Vegas on January 6, 2011. Watch Video ›
Lady Gaga reveals her new business card as the creative director for Polaroid. Watch the Lady Gaga with Dr. Dre at CES 2010. View Image ›
A 10-minute promotional film for the Polaroid SX-70 that Charles and Ray Eames made in the ’70s. Watch Video ›
From March 31, 1979 through his death on October 25, 1997, photographer Jamie Livingston took a Polaroid almost every day. We’re late to finding out about this project (Huffington Post and VSL had it last May, the New York Times wrote about in October), but it’s nice fit for the reflective post-New Year period to look at Livingston’s catalog of life, from tiny everyday moments to moving photos of his engagement and battle with cancer. Read More ›
The Times mourns the death of the Polaroid. The company that made the film has stopped manufacturing it, which means future generations will be totally perplexed by that line in “Hey Ya.”
A desktop app that lets you convert your digital photographs into amazing old-school polaroids. It over-saturates all the colors for you so all your photos can look like 70s deadstock that you found in the attic.