Fred Canonge: Pehlwan of Benares

Photo © Fred Canonge-All Rights Reserved
Pehlwani (also known as Kushti) is a traditional style of wrestling popular in the sub-continent of India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. The wrestler is known as pahlawan which, interestingly for those who are etymologists, is the colloquial Arabic word meaning "clown". I wouldn't tell this to these wrestlers, as they would be offended and I'd be on the mat in less than a second.

Based in Paris, Fred Canonge is a French freelance photographer who has extensively travelled in India for the last ten years, and is constantly exploring all the nuances and the diversity of Indian society. His website is replete with galleries of India, including some of images made in Kathputli and Varanasi, but the gallery which I liked the most has his work on the pehlawan.

Varanasi has a number of traditional wrestling training gyms (known as akhara), and one can spot them working with rudimentary weights near Tulsi ghat. The wrestlers' diets consist of milk, almonds, ghee, eggs and chapattis, but have a difficult time making ends meet. Some of them find work as bodyguards to those who need protection or as "enforcers" during political elections.

VII: Franco Pagetti: Afghanistan's Agony


The exciting VII The Magazine features Afghanistan' Agony, the multimedia work of Franco Pagetti which combines movies, stills in both color and black & white.

Although I'm getting tired of war stories and its imagery, Pagetti manages to infuse this work with his own personality as when he says (I paraphrase) in his Italian accent"...the only thing a photographer really wants...more than life, more than sex...more than anything...is to be invisible." Brilliant!

This multimedia piece provides a very realistic of what Afghanistan must be...it merges color stills with black & white images (which, in my view, are the best of the lot), aerial shots and movie footage.

Overall a very well done production, but if I had to point out a niggling issue, I'd say the decision to include the audio introduction of a muezzin's call to prayers is a lazy one. The Taliban, the insurgents, and the rest of the "bad guys" are fighting us because of a bunch of reasons. Take your pick: because we're occupying their country, because we're defending an unrepresentative corrupt regime, because we're getting in the way of various longstanding tribal and/or ethnic power struggles, and because we're tying to eradicate poppy cultivation...subsistence to many Afghan farmers.

It would have been smarter to find another audio clip to give the project the required sense of the place...perhaps a Pashto song, perhaps some ambient audio of Kabul's market chatter. Some readers might see this as nit-picking, but it's not. Avoiding religious cliches is a much more intelligent production effort and in this case, keeps it honest and neutral as it should be.

Franco Pagetti has covered the conflict in Iraq since January 2003. He has been a news photographer since 1994, and most of his recent work has involved conflict situations. His non-conflict news photography has included assignments in India, the Vatican City, Cambodia, Laos, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia and his native Italy. In his “former life,” he was a fashion photographer for Italian VOGUE and taught chemistry at Milano’s University .

Books By Participants In TTP's Photo~Expeditions™

A few weeks ago, I wished here that more of the participants who join my photo~expeditions would, not only feature their work on their websites as most do already, but also publish their images in book form. It's not an easy task to prep and publish a book, but the eventual satisfaction is just sublime. I know first hand because I self-published Bali: Island of Odalan, and now I'm waiting for the sample proof of my second book Darshan (an announcement will be made shortly).

So I was very pleased to see 4 members of The Travel Photographer's Photo~Expeditions™ have already published their books (and with some, already their second or even third book).

1. Torie Olson joined my Theyyam of Malabar Photo`Expedition™ in 2009, and has just published the wonderful Life In Color (Photographs of Gujarat), a 117 page large hard cover landscape book.


2. Sandy Chandler joined a number of my photo trips; the latest being Bali: Island of Odalan Photo~Expedition™ this past July, and has just published Calling The Soul, an 80 page standard landscape book that promises to be a gem.


3. Charlotte Rush-Bailey joined my Tribes of Rajasthan & Gujarat Photo Expedition™ earlier this year, and quickly published her Kutch Classic, a 98 page large format hard cover landscape with her "specially brewed" photographs.


4) Susan Storm joined my Sikkim & Darjeeling Photo Expedition™ in 2003. A photographer and journalist for over 20 years, she worked for many of the top magazines in most continents. She published Colours In The Dust (On The Sari Trail), a 232 pages standard landscape book of her lovely images of India.


My congratulations to these photographers who took the initiative and featured their work in print form. I'm looking forward to hearing from other participants as to their book publishing efforts. C'mon, guys!

Next Week On The Travel Photographer


For the week starting Monday November 29,  the following posts are in the blog's pipeline:

1. The work of a photographer with a ton of images of India, including one of the wrestlers of Benares. I had planned to post it last week.
2. The work of another photographer with a lot of images of Buddhism. All black & white square format with a Hassleblad. Very impressive.
3. The work of an editorial photographer with a gallery of images from the Khumbu (Northern Nepal).
4. Interesting portraits of "witches" from West Africa.
5. The updated website of one of the best travel photographers will be featured.

Plus other whimsical posts as the week goes on.

NPR: Cairo And The "Disconnected"



This touches on photography/multimedia only tangentially, so unless you're into Middle Eastern-international politics, you may want to skip all the stuff below and just click on the movie.

A number of media outlets are gingerly covering Egypt's political scene due to the imminent parliamentary elections. I say gingerly because Egypt is a so-called major ally in the "war against terror" or whatever it's called these days, so it wouldn't be politic or in our national "interests" to criticize its ossified and corrupt regime. Why the United States aligns itself with despots in the Middle East and elsewhere will always be an anachronism.

NPR has featured a number of short articles and some multimedia for the occasion, and I found this one titled In Cairo Slum, Little Hope For Change to be an exemplar of what the current situation is in Egypt. I say "current" but that's not really correct. It's always been that way, and it'll continue to be that way, perhaps get even wider...a profound disconnect and an immense gap between the poor and the elite. Trust me...I know that for a fact.

An Egyptian investment banker (I'm not sure how he can be one with such an atrocious spoken English) complains that his children are disconnected from the rest of Egypt because they go to American schools, wear Western clothes and barely speak Egyptian Arabic. Well, I've got news for him....the "disconnect" has been prevalent since the Pharaohs.

Every dog has his day as the saying goes...so going back in modern history, it was the Ottomanophiles, then Anglophiles and the Francophiles who were the elite class, and disconnected from the people. Identical to the Tsarist elite in Russian who would only speak in French, the Egyptian elite would live in bubbles of their own making, separated from the "non-elite" and the rest of their compatriots. To a lesser extent, the time for the socialist Nasserites and Sadatites came and went. Now, it's the turn of the Mubarakphiles...the business cronies, the oligarchs, and the corrupt corporate/political alliances who form the recent elite....but these will also vanish when their time comes, only to be replaced by a hungrier demographic. We've been there before, and it's only a matter of time before the cycle repeats itself. A class will just replace another class. And by the way, claiming to have Turkish ancestry (some extremely tenuous and others grossly made up) is currently a de rigueur affectation for many of the newly minted Egyptian wealthy class. Go figure. Having Turkish heritage was once viewed as being regressive, not authentic and even unpatriotic. I know that for a fact as well.

But back to the "disconnected"...which many of the privileged (some would describe them as spoiled) Egyptian youth are. Confused by a brainless embrace of a culture that is not theirs; an embrace made possible because their parents are the current moneyed elite and can buy into an ersatz Americanism; confused by their own dichotomy...seeing no conflict between binge drinking, heavy partying and then fasting Ramadan and claiming religiosity...but unable and unwilling to adopt American meritocratic values, its democratic values and work ethics.

Watch the multimedia piece...then shed a tear for the real people of Egypt who deserve infinitely better than the dismal life they're leading.

Gareth Pugh Leather Scarf

This outfit was my favorite outfit of the month; November. I actually wore it so many times in the last four weeks. Two weeks ago, I finally managed to take pictures of it, but I didn't have a chance to share it before we went on our trip to California. I will see you in Dallas tomorrow. Here is the outfit:
Balenciaga jacket was over 2 years ago, from consignment store INA in NYC.
This is my coolest scarf in my closet; Gareth Pugh leather scarf which I purchased sometime long ago. I've gotten tons of compliments whenever I wear it. I styled it with Proenza top, Madewell jeans, Alaia heeled-hiking boots.
Christopher Ross rabbit buckle belt.
IDEA TIP for DIY this scarf: you could find a nice piece of leather, faux leather, or suede, or fabric which is medium weight and still gives a good permanent raw edge. It is about 3 yards 12 inches long and about 13 inches wide (or whatever size you like). Then, use a chalk to draw and cut out the pattern as it shows in the pictures above. The last thing you need is your time and be patient...At least, you don't have to sew ;)

Thank you everyone for visiting and comments!! Have a lovely weekend!! Hugs...Hanh :)

Kares Le Roy: Tibet & More


Here's the photographic work of Kares Le Roy, a French photographer and graphic designer. Unfortunately, his bio is very limited on his web site, but he traveled and photographed in Tibet, Nepal, India, Bali, Cuba, Cambodia and Morocco...returning with quite an inventory of photographs which he categorizes as Portraits, Life, Street and Landscape.

Black Friday: Get My Book!!!


On this Black Friday, my new photo book Bali: Island of Gods is still available from Blurb.

You can choose between two main versions of the book (82 pages of black & white photographs): one is a large (13x11 inches) landscape hardcover version and the other is a standard (10x8 inches) landscape version.

More details are available on a page of my website Island of Gods. The link will also take you to my bookstore on Blurb, which has previews of the book.

Forget the long lines at the check-outs...just do it online. :o)

Customer Journey For Online Travel

This year we revisited* the Customer Journey for Online Travel in the UK. Nielsen used their NetView metered panel to monitor travel research, quotation and purchase behaviour of 50,000 UK panelists in the key sales period, January to March (2010).

We analysed:
· The journey and profile of a purchaser beyond 1st transaction

· The role of paid and natural search, brand and generic keywords on one's propensity to book

· The relationship between search, research, product and review sites in the journey path

We will be releasing the information next Wednesday 1st December and holding a webinar between 4-5pm to present the findings and talk through the data. Nielsen will be on hand to address any methodology questions.

Name: UK Online Travel: The Customer Journey 2010

Start time: 12/01/2010 4:00 PM
End time: 12/01/2010 5:00 PM

Registration Link: https://googleemea.connectsolutions.com/e31836066/event/

We urge you to register before the event as we ask for adwords account information.

Please do join us!
The UK Google Travel Team

*We first looked at the customer journey with Comscore in 2007, both we and our clients have been referencing those finding ever since.

Posted by Sarah McDonald, Senior Industry Manager, Travel Team

Thanksgiving Wishes


All the best from The Travel Photographer on this Thanksgiving Day!

There may not be a post tomorrow...I'll be flying back to New York, probably feeling very full.

All You Want For Christmas




The Google Travel team's latest whitepaper is now available! All You Want For Christmas looks at the increasing importance of December to the online travel market, the change in the way people search for travel products during this period and the effect of the extended January peak. We hope that the paper will help travel advertisers plan more effectively for what is the busiest period of the year.

Please click here for the latest paper.

Posted by Michael Wicks, Industry Analyst, Travel Team.

Apratim Saha: Varanasi

Apratim Saha is both a pharmaceutical executive and a photographer, whose work has been featured in the National Geographic and other publications. He's also a contributor to NationalGeographicStock.com

While I've liked Apratim's Varanasi gallery in which the above photograph of the sadhu is fetured, there's a photograph of a holy man, possibly after a dip in the Ganges, carefully arranging what can only be described as a comb-over. A priceless image of the temporal perhaps trumping the sacred. You'll find it in the Culture portfolio.

Artistic Mind

My little girl loves art; drawing, painting, designing clothing for her doll or for herself. She can do things like that all day without complaining.
This is her sketch for her dress when she was 4 years old. Her first time to design clothes. She actually picked out her own color and fabric. Grandma was the one to sew the dress for her.
She was in her dress for her 6 year old birthday.
She takes advantage of wherever she can draw or paint, whether at a swimming pool or at the airport while we're waiting for our flight, or in the air plane...
This is her self portrait when she was 6 years old.
She just turned 7 last month and this is her recent design for her doll's clothes. She wanted exactly the color and the sketch as shown on the right.
This is her dog that she wished for when she was 4 years old.
This is her drawing for Halloween this year.
This is my favorite one. She recently drew it for Thanksgiving.

My big girl doesn't like art that much. But whenever she does arts or crafts, she includes details and does a great job. This is her Turkey. She has a scientific mind.
Thank you everyone for visiting!!! Have a wonderful day!!! and...
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!!!!

Michelle Frankfurter: Destino

Photo © Michelle Frankfurter- All Rights Reserved
Having read Cormac McCarthy’s, The Crossing, Michelle Frankfurter started to photograph along the US-Mexico border, and focuses her photo essay Destino featured on Burn magazine on undocumented Central American migrants who travel across Mexico in an attempt to reach the United States to work.

It's a sad tale that highlights not only the harsh risks inherent in such an endeavor, be it from criminal gangs, from corrupt police, from accidents to a myriad of other life-endangering events on the way.

A number of photographers attending the Mexico Foundry Photojournalism Workshop chose a similar subject for their documentary projects, and the area known as La Lecheria, where migrants seemed to converge to hitchhike north-bound trains, was a magnet for those photographers.

Michelle Frankfurter
is a documentary photographer who worked for three years as a staff photographer for daily newspapers: The Herald – Journal and Post Standard in Syracuse, New York. She spent three years living in Nicaragua where she worked as a stringer for the British news agency, Reuters and with the human rights organization Witness For Peace. In 1995, a long-term project on Haiti earned her two World Press Photo awards. She has worked for a number of editorial publications, including The Guardian of London, The Washington Post Magazine, Ms., Time, and Life Magazine.

Monetize your Blog with Ebuzzing


Our blogs allow us to stay in touch not only with friends and other bloggers but with other organisations and brands we like in real and virtual life, too. For example, we like National Geographic Wild, visit their site often, write about it, watch their documentaries and embed them in our posts. All our friends like them too, and we discus the themes they publish with pleasure.
However, this passion can gratify us with money, too. It's enough to join the always growing community of bloggers on Ebuzzing that, working with the grand brands like Lloyds TSB, PayPal, Levis, FHM etc from 2007, connects bloggers with their favourite brands, and earn money for our articles.
The registration is very easy, and just in some minutes you can start earning. Ebuzzing does not obstruct your creativity with complicated rules and conditions. You can express your feelings free and explain them in your own words. Ebuzzing gives you only a few bullet points, links and images -all the rest is the flight of your fantasy. 
N​ot only articles, your blog can be enriched with videos of brands you like. Is it not fantastic: meet your favourite brand or video every time you open you blog?​ And earn at the same time?
There were many discussions if bloggers may write sponsored posts in their blogs or not. Someone said, it is not correct towards the readers. They, readers, have to know you are paid for this or that post. Don't worry. It's not about Ebuzzing. The strict code of ethics of the company ensures that the readers are informed ​and the articles are clearly marked as sponsored so as you can see here, in the bottom.
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Akhtar Soomro: Pakistan

Photo © Akhtar Soomro/Reuters-All Rights Reserved
Full Focus, Reuters photo blog, seems to be regaining its footing amongst the remaining other large image photo blogs, and has recently featured the work of Pakistani photojournalist Akhtar Soomro.

Born in the Lyari neighborhood of Karachi, Pakistan, Akhtar graduated from the Government College of Science and Technology with a degree in engineering but photography beckoned, and he started working for a studio covering fashion, industrial and interior design, and subsequently for an advertising agency.

He has since shot assignments for local and international newspapers, magazines and stock agencies around the world. In 2009, he was part of a New York Times' team that won a Pulitzer for its reporting from Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Most of Akhtar's impressive photographs in the Reuters feature are of refugees of the floods, and of displaced people from the Swat Valley...but it's the one above that caught my eye. Its caption informs us that a flood victim baby sleeps in a hammock as a man reads the Koran during Eid-al-Fitr celebrations while taking refuge in a relief camp for flood victims in Sukkur in Pakistan's Sindh province on September 11, 2010.

POV: Weeding The Subscribers: It's Time Again


It's the time of year when I have to start weeding (a more delicate term than 'purge') inactive subscribers from my newsletter mailing list. I have to do this about twice a year now.

Campaign Monitor tracks the number of newsletters opens for each subscriber, so it's easy to determine the rate of open of each. If that rate is less than a certain percentage, the subscriber is dumped. As I use a pay-as-you-go option to send out my newsletters, each subscriber costs me...and if there's no reasonable open activity during a 12 months period, then it's to the dumping grounds we go.

It's more efficient for all concerned, saves me money and un-clutters the disinterested subscribers' mailboxes. Last year, I weeded out about 300 subscribers. The total amount of weeded subscribers over the past 3 years is now about 900. Nothing to sneeze at!

Raphael Nguyen: Vietnam

Photo © Raphael Nguyen-All Rights Reserved

Photo © Raphael Nguyen-All Rights Reserved

Raphael Nguyen is a French-Vietnamese photographer, who moved to Vietnam in 1999. He lived Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, and finally in Hoi An in the very center of the country. He travels within the country, uses either film or digital cameras; Nikon FM2, Nikon F3 and Nikon D70, Canon EOS 5 D and Canon EOS 5 D Mark II.

I was drawn to his gallery of Daily Life in Vietnam with over 100 intensely saturated color photographs of various areas of Vietnam. These range from simple portraits, lifestyle shots, culinary images, environmental portraits etc. The ones I liked most and feature here are of Hoi An, and these two underscore Raphael's photographic style...which gives his images an overly golden saturated look.

Hoi An's old town was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO as a well-preserved example of a Southeast Asian trading port of the 15th to 19th centuries, with a unique building with local and foreign influences. I was in Hoi An for a couple of days while photographing for a NGO in 2003, and had little time to photograph for myself. I sense it's time to return and redress this shortcoming.

Polka Dots + Leopard Prints for Day and Night

The mixed prints formula: polka dots + leopard = my favorite mixed prints of this season. It looks effortless but over the top. Yes, it instantly updates your look.
When it comes to wearing leopard prints, you should be careful because it could make you look like you got lost on the way to the zoo. A little touch of leopard in your outfit is perfectly young, in style, and chic. It's just my sense of style.
For daytime: Dolce & Gabbana polka dots top, Haider Ackermann jacket, Elizabeth & james biker pants, Marni leopard bag, Jeffrey Campbell lita boots.
For nighttime: Dolce & Gabbana top and skirt, Guiseppe Zanotti leopard wedges.
Janis Savitt necklace.
One of my favorite Balenciaga jackets was over 2 years ago which I purchased at INA consignment store in NYC.
Thank you everyone for visiting and comments! Wishing you a wonderful day ahead!! Hugs...Hanh :)
ps: just set up Bloglovin and Facebook on the right side of the screen. Please, follow me :))

Next Week on The Travel Photographer


For the week starting Monday November 21,  the following posts are in the pipeline:

1. The work of a part-time Indian photographer with multi galleries, including one on Varanasi.
2. A Vietnamese photographer's gallery of Vietnam's daily life. I didn't manage to post it last week as planned.
3. The work of a photojournalist on Pakistan's Swat Valley and the floods.
4. An interesting edgy documentary on illegal emigrants from Central America. A post I had planned for last week.
5. The work of a photographer with a ton of images of India, including one of the wrestlers of Benares.
6. Another photographer will be featured with a lot of images of Buddhism.

Le Blob Jewelry

Hi everyone,
I hope you're doing well. It's just a quick post to share with you a jewelry designer; Fernando Akasaka. He is from Sao Paolo, Brazil and his roots is Japanese. He began his career a furniture designer. Later on, he created his jewelry line; Le Blob, in October 2009. His jewelry's work has developed an exclusive range of handmade jewels made of solid .950 sterling silver or .750 gold(18k). I've found his jewelry is very striking, strong, and bold. His inspiration comes from nature: from sea anemones to snake, from coral to talons to bones. Click on his website to see his collection, and here are some:
Cuffs




Rings




Necklaces



His furniture line; F.AKASAKA which it is modern, contemporary. It has featured in many magazine as Vogue, Casa Luxo, Casa Vogue..ect...I describe his furniture is sculptural, functional art, handcrafted quality of the finished product. He said "My client is eclectic, and always looking for something new, original and unique." I told him that I would love to have his furniture piece in my house someday. Please, check out his furniture website to see his incredible work.
Thank you everyone for visiting and comments! Wish you all a lovely weekend! Hug...Hanh:)
ps: I just signed up for facebook, and set up the Bloglovin. Please, follow me :))