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Six Images (and then some)

~ Selections from Tim Bird's travel photography archives

Six Images (and then some)

Author Archives: Tim Bird

Six Picks: the Cathedral of Tampere in central Finland

26 Thursday Mar 2015

Posted by Tim Bird in architecture, art, culture, travel photography

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Cathedral, finland, helsinki, Hugo Simberg, Hvitträsk, Jugendstil, Lars Sonck, National Romantic, Tampere

A regular themed photo blog selected from images either in or on their into my website archive at www.timbirdphotography.com

I just paid a flying visit to Tampere, a city on the confluence of two big lakes in central Finland, and dropped in to what is one of my favourite buildings in the whole country, the city’s cathedral. It was designed by Lars Sonck, a prime exponent of the Finnish National Romantic architectural style at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, a kind of cultural expression of national identity when Finland was still governed as a Grand Duchy of the Russian Empire.

Much of the best and most distinctive architecture and art in Finland dates to this period; the National Museum and National Theatre in Helsinki are other examples, as is Hvitträsk, a wonderful lakeside Tolkienesque fantasy in wood and granite close to the capital, the former home and collective studio-cum-drinking den of three architects, Gesellius, Lindgren and Saarinen, and now a museum. The cathedral’s materials of wood and granite, as well as evocative symbolic frescoes, paintings and stained glass, are typical of what I think is a very appealing style.

Tampere Cathedral contradicts the idea that all Lutheran churches are restrained and sombre. In fact when it opened in 1907 the cathedral was controversial with worshippers who wondered, for example, why a symbol of the devil, a snake fresco, was featured in its interior.

Here, then, are six picks from my visit.

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Tampere Cathedral – straight out of Tolkien. Greatness in granite.

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The ceiling of the Cathedral bears the image of a snake by Hugo Simberg.

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View towards the altar, showing the vaulted ceilings, a kind of romantic Gothic, with the altarpiece and stained glass window designed by Magnus Enckell.

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The Burning Bush is one of six stained glass windows by Hugo Simberg.

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Twelve boys hold the Garland of Life, a fresco running around the gallery, painted by Simberg.

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The main door of the Cathedral. You can see many heavy wooden doors and whimsical granite arches like this in the Jugendstil districts of Helsinki, such as Katajanokka and Eira.

 

 

If you’ve enjoyed this glimpse of my photography, please follow and come back for more next time, as well as Tweet, Hoot, Shout and Share. And do visit my website at www.timbirdphotography.com

http://visittampere.fi/

Read an essay by Elisa Valtonen about the Cathedral here:

http://www15.uta.fi/FAST/FIN/REL/ev-cathe.html

For info about Hvitträsk:

http://www.nba.fi/en/museums/hvittrask

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Six Picks: Monochrome portraits from India

17 Tuesday Mar 2015

Posted by Tim Bird in Uncategorized

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Bihar, Delhi, India, monochrome, opium, Rajasthan, skin, Topaz, travel photography, tribe

A reasonably regular photo blog of six images either taken from or about to add to my considerable travel photography archives at www.timbirdphotography.com

I’ve just downloaded a fun plug-in for Lightroom called Topaz BW Effects and I’ve been playing around with it. It seems especially interesting when processing portraits, and I seem to have developed a special interest in the photographic possibilities of skin and facial features. I’ve tried it out with some pictures from Indian travels.  See what you think, and let me know! Feedback and photographic discussions always welcome.

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My driver in Rajasthan. He took me to the house of an opium seller. Really. The opium seller was purportedly licensed. Yes, I did try it and no, it wasn’t very strong. In any case, I thought the driver’s face was remarkable, even before I went anywhere near the opium.

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In Rajasthan I was taken for a brief visit to a tribal visit where this lady posed for me. In India they thought of every fashion centuries before they devised it in Europe. Check out the bangles and the nose decoration.

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Two Rajasthani gentleman enjoying not doing much in particular, a popular pursuit in rural India and one that’s underrated in the West..

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I met this incredibly photogenic lady in a backstreet in Jaipur. Nice big ankle bangles, in addition to a face that tells a few stories.

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Books, most of them of the religious Muslim variety, are the theme in this one, not skin. Shot at the Nizamuddin Sufi shrine in Delhi.

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King of his village: this fellow winds down in the evening in the northern state of Bihar.

As I said, feedback and comments always welcome. If you have enjoyed your visit, Tweet, Share and sing it to the rooftops. And do come back again.

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Six Picks: Arctic Snow Hotel, Rovaniemi, Lapland

02 Monday Mar 2015

Posted by Tim Bird in Arctic travel, hotels, lapland, Travel, travel photography, winter

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Arctic Circle, cold, finland, freezing, hotel, ice, Lapland, Rovaniemi, snow, Snow Castle, Snow Hotel, winter

An occasional photo blog presenting six themed shots from Tim Bird’s travel photo archives – visit www.timbirdphotography.com

It’s a drab and relatively snowless winter in southern Finland and skiers and skaters, of which there are many in this part of the world, are lamenting the lack of the white stuff. Up in Lapland, a thousand or so kilometres, it’s a different story – there’s always lots of snow up there. I was there myself a few weeks ago, and one of the highlights of the trip was a visit to the Arctic Snow Hotel, just above the Arctic Circle and close to the provincial Lapp capital of Rovaniemi.

This isn’t the only architecture of snow and ice in the northern Nordic area, of course. There’s an annual Snow Castle at Kemi on Finland’s north-west coast celebrating its 20th year in 2015 (I’ve stayed at that one too) and igloos full of Auorora-hunting Japanese couples at Kakslauttanen near Finland’s Saariselkä ski resort, where I also spent one icy night. They’re wonderful creations which usually start to thaw at the end of March and whose inside temperatures soar to minus five – compared with minus 20 to 30 outside. Being an honorary Finn, I can’t bring myself to name those impostors on the Swedish side of the border.

So to deliver a taste of winter to snow-free zones, here are six images from the Arctic Snow Hotel. If you want to stay there, you’ve got one month left – they’re taking bookings until ‘around’ March 31!

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Snow sculptures on the walls, the work of local art students.

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Reindeer pelts on beds of ice, and a fire place made of ice! Real fires not recommended.

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A ghost in the ice chapel. Weddings are held here.

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Gothic lighting in the ice restaurant.

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Cool suite in the Arctic Snow Hotel.

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The Ice Bar, always on the rocks.

Visit the Arctic Snow Hotel web site at http://www.arcticsnowhotel.fi/

If you’ve enjoyed this little pictorial distraction please Share, Tweet, Like, and watch this space for more Six Picks photo blogs.

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Six picks: A free lunch in Amritsar

10 Tuesday Feb 2015

Posted by Tim Bird in Amritsar, Golden Triangle, India, Punjab, religion

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Amritsar, food, Golden Temple, India, Punjab, religion, Sikh, tradition

Six images from my alarmingly expanding archives: visit my website at www.timbirdphotography.com

India is full of surprises. Just when you think the whole place is falling apart and there is no concern for order of any kind, you come across startling examples of method in the madness. Amritsar was my latest example of this.

It’s as polluted as any city in India, more polluted than most, and the litter-strewn roads appear to be falling apart. An unhealthy haze hangs over everything. Yet when you enter the main compound of the Golden Temple, the Harmandir Sahib, you are immediately enchanted by a sense of calm and almost pristine cleanliness of a kind almost unknown on the daily outward face of India.

This is the centre of the Sikh religion, a hybrid mix of Hinduism and Islam founded by the Guru Nanak in the 15th century. The original holy book of the Sikhs, the Guru Grath Sahib, is housed in the main shrine opposite the dazzling Temple, itself positioned in the middle of a ‘tank’ or artificial pool approached along a canopied marble causeway, rumoured to have healing powers for those who brave its chilly water. It’s a very gentle place, where verses from the holy book are chanted from loudspeakers, live ensembles of traditional musicians perform, and the tall bearded Sikh guards quietly ensure that etiquette is observed, like gentle bouncers.

The Golden Temple is well documented and photographed – understandably. It is an extraordinarily beautiful apparition. Less well documented is the refectory, the ‘langar’ or meal hall, where pilgrims and infidel foreign guests such as myself can sit cross-legged on the floor and eat little feasts of dal, sweet rice pudding and roti. The all-welcoming open restaurant is symbolic of the open nature of Sikhism, which shuns the caste system of its cousin Hinduism, for example.

I wandered into the huge kitchens quite unchallenged, greeted only with smiles and welcoming gestures – a dreamland for photographers accustomed to stern and grudging looks of admonishment. Vast vats of dal steamed away, the roti machine continued on its daily production of 60,000 pieces of bread, the volunteer dishwashers lined up to do their bit over troughs filled with clanking metal thali plates. And everything proceeding with the kind of clockwork efficiency that would put the Swiss to shame.

Here are six images from my very memorable visit. Since other aspects of India, such as its sometimes dodgy wifi, are holding true to form as I post this, the pictures might not appear in any logical order at first, but I hope you get the idea!refectory6 refectory5 refectory4 refectory3 refectory2 refectory1

If you’ve enjoyed your visit, please do follow and return! And take a look at my website at www.timbirdphotography.com

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Six Picks: the Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris

17 Saturday Jan 2015

Posted by Tim Bird in culture, France, music, Paris, Travel, travel photography

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cemetery, Chopin, Jim Morrison, Oscar Wilde, Paris, Père Lachaise Cemetery, Piaf, religion

Six Picks – a photo blog drawn from my archives, much of which is on show at www.timbirdphotography.com

Paris and religion are this week’s buzzwords, so it seems like as good (or bad) a time as any to combine them in the symbols of the Père Lachaise Cemetery in the French capital, a wonderfully atmospheric place of burial and the resting place for the likes of Jim Morrison (probably), Oscar Wilde, Édith Piaf and Frédéric François Chopin, to name just a few of the celebrities, in addition to many other less well-known souls.

The cemetery is near Boulevard Menilmontant and was opened in 1804 on the site of a Jesuit retreat. It’s at turns touching, scary and poignant, very large and rambling,and well worth a visit.

These pictures were made using my previous Canon camera using a gimmicky little gadget called a Lens Baby that gives the spooky blurred effect.

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I have heard Oscar's memorial has been sealed off to prevent his many devotees from planting their lipstick on it.

I have heard Oscar’s memorial has been sealed off to prevent his many devotees from planting their lipstick on it.

A disturbing and hard-hitting memorial to French Jews who perished in the death camps of the Second World War.

A disturbing and hard-hitting memorial to French Jews who perished in the death camps of the Second World War.

Vampires?

Vampires?

She had no regrets.

She had no regrets.

Very sad.

Very sad.

Thank you for visiting – please drop in again. Find me also on Instagram as Indifreak and on Twitter as @BirdTimothy

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Six Picks: Colonial towns and volcanoes in Nicaragua

03 Saturday Jan 2015

Posted by Tim Bird in art, Central America, culture, geology, Travel, travel photography

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Central America, colonial architecture, festival, Granada, Leon, Nicaragua, volcano, volcanoes

A photo blog delving into my travel photography archives at www.timbirdphotography.com

A few years ago I had an obsession with volcanoes. Or rather, my continuing obsession with volcanoes manifested itself in the form of several visits to Central America, to Guatemala, Costa Rica and Honduras, for example. One of those visits was to Nicaragua where I did managed to gaze, Frodo-like, into some ominously smoking volcanic craters. More of those later, but here is a quick New Year re-visit to the lakeside colonial gems of Leon and Granada, and a glimpse of one smoking vent.

Happy New Year, Six Picks visitor!

Street mural commemorating the July 23, 1959 massacre of slaughters in Leon.

Street mural commemorating the July 23, 1959 massacre of slaughters in Leon.

Street scene from the bell tower in Granada

Street scene from the bell tower in Granada

Firework celebrations in the square at Leon

Firework celebrations in the square at Leon

My guide, Jesus, took me to the mountain. Here he is peering in to the smouldering crater of the Telica volcano.

My guide, Jesus, took me to the mountain. Here he is peering dangerously into the smouldering crater of the Telica volcano.

Festival procession makes its way to the cathedral square in Leon.

Festival procession makes its way to the cathedral square in Leon.

Granada residents taking it easy

Granada residents taking it easy

Six Picks is a fairly regular introduction to my travel photography. To view my galleries, visit my website at www.timbirdphotography.com. If you enjoy your visits, please share, Tweet, shout and holler.

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Six Picks: The Migrating Monarchs of Mexico

13 Saturday Dec 2014

Posted by Tim Bird in Uncategorized

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Angangueo, butterflies, El Rosario, environment, insects, Mexico, Michoacan, migration, Monarch butterflies, TPOTY, Travel Photographer of the Year, travel photography

Six images in a photo blog taken from my travel photography archives: visit www.timbirdphotography.com to see more of my pictures.

Last week the Travel Photographer of the Year competition announced its results for 2014 and I was delighted to get a picture Commended in the Wild & Vibrant single image category. I’ve been Highly Commended in the past, I won their 10th anniversary celebration competition last year, and I have been a finalist in previous years as well as this one. Thousands of entries are received from over 100 countries so I regard it as a definite compliment to be recognized in any way. The competition has become as much a part of my annual calendar as Christmas, along with the exhibition at the Royal Geographical Society in Kensington, London, that displays the winners and which takes place next year from July 24 to September 5. There’s a link to the winners’ gallery at the bottom of this page.

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My commended picture, above, shows an early morning scene from the forests in the mountains close to the town of Angangueo in Michoacan, Mexico. The forests are protected to some extent against logging and wayward tourism as part of the El Rosario Butterfly Biosphere Reserve. Every year in the North American winter millions of Monarch butterflies make the long flight south – over 2,000 kilometres – to these same few hills to spend the winter.

When I made the climb up into the forest one early March morning in 2009, the first visitor of the day, the sun was still rising and the butterflies were resting in vast clusters in the treetops. In fact, it took my eyes some time to adjust to the fact that these were not leaves but an enormous congregation of insects. When the sun began to rise, the wings of the butterflies began to open in the warmth and after an hour or two the sky was alive with a softly fluttering orange cloud.

It is one of the most extraordinary, beautiful and spectacular phenomena in the natural world, made even more remarkable by the fact that the butterflies that return north to the United States and Canada from migration will not return to spend another winter here – in other words, the insects are somehow instinctively programmed to make their way to the same hills and forests.

A Mexican translator friend who helped me to arrange my visit tells me that the area is now more dangerous to get to because of the rising drug cartel-related and other violence that is sadly part of Mexico’s everyday life, so my visit was well timed. Happily the butterflies are immune to this particular kind of inane human activity, although not to environmental human damage.

It’s nice to be able to draw attention to a positive story from Mexico, a beautiful and exciting country with a vibrant culture. Perhaps my Commended picture and the others you can see here will serve as a small reminder of the country’s happier attractions.

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Butterflies gather in thick orange mats in streams and springs.

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The butterflies will land on your hands and clothing but you shouldn’t actively pick them up or you can damage the delicate wings.

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In my next issue of Six Picks I plan to show you some of the images that were shortlisted for the TPOTY competition but didn’t quite make the winner list – watch this space!

TPOTY winners this year: http://www.tpoty.com/winners/2014

Congratulations to all the winners – these are some of the world’s top travel shooters and to get even close to their company is an honour and pleasure – and encouraging too.

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Six Picks: the Great Rann of Kutch

30 Sunday Nov 2014

Posted by Tim Bird in Uncategorized

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Arabian Sea, desert, Great Rann of Kutch, Gujarat, henna, Hodka, India, Kutch, Pakistan, salt, sunset

A frustratingly occasional trawl through the travel photo archives: visit www.timbirdphotography.com for more

To the west of the Indian state of Gujarat and bordered to the south by the Arabian Sea in the region of Kutch lies the extraordinary Great Rann, a seemingly endless, dazzling expanse of salt marsh, flooded in the rainy season but a covered with a crystalline crust of sodium chloride for the rest of the year. The 7,500 square kilometre white desert stretches as far as Pakistan in the north-west and you need to pay for a special permit to approach the area. It’s one of the hottest parts of India, with summer temperatures reaching well above 45 degrees, although it can sink to zero in winter. Indian tourists congregate on the edge of the Rann to watch the sun slide down beyond the shimmering horizon in the evenings.

It’s without question the most spectacular expanse of featureless landscape I have ever seen! Here are Six Picks to give an idea of the local ambiance. The fellow with the henna hair is a local resident. The tented accommodation shown here and the musical entertainment were provided at the highly recommended Hodka Shaam-E-Sarhad (Sunset at the Border) Village Resort:

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Visit www.timbirdphotography.com for more photos.

Find me on Twitter at @BirdTimothy

Click here to find me on Facebook.

And Instagram here: http://instagram.com/indifreak

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Six Picks: a stroll along the Strip

08 Saturday Nov 2014

Posted by Tim Bird in Uncategorized

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A rather irregular photo blog sharing six images from the archives at www.timbirdphotography.com and other adventures.

One of the great things about self-employment in this line of work is that life is even more full of surprises than it might be otherwise. Las Vegas was one of those places I never thought I would visit, but a couple of weeks ago I was commissioned to attend a conference on something called Big Data and to write an article on the subject. Not my usual field, but I’m nothing if not versatile, so I jumped at the chance. I listened to Steely Dan’s Showbiz Kids and ZZ Top’s version of Viva Las Vegas to get myself in the mood and off I went.

Las Vegas is like concentrated USA, a money-making, money-spending machine in the middle of the desert in Nevada. I was a bit frustrated to be mostly confined to Las Vegas Boulevard, otherwise known as the Strip, lined with endless casinos, hotels like mini-Disneylands, restaurants selling unfeasibly large plates of food and Latinos in g-strings and nothing else gaily jogging over the crossways. I glimpsed the rugged mountains of the desert glowing at sunrise and sunset, backdrops for a thousand Westerns, but I couldn’t get out there. I also regret not having time to go and see Donny and Marie Osmond perform. Maybe I’ll go back one day and the chances are they’ll still be on the bill.

I probably wouldn’t hurry back to Vegas – I don’t know how to gamble for one thing, and that’s a fairly basic requisite. But it provided some entertaining shooting opportunities that distracted me from losing my wages. Here are a handful of shots from my short visit:

Neon signage at Harrah's. It's hard to work out where the casinos finish and the hotels and shopping malls begin. One thing is for sure - there is little point coming here unless you've got money to burn. Or you're just happy taking photos.

Neon signage at Harrah’s. It’s hard to work out where the casinos finish and the hotels and shopping malls begin. One thing is for sure – there is little point coming here unless you’ve got money to burn. Or you’re just happy taking photos.

The fountain show outside the Bellagio, a spectacle repeated every 15 minutes.

The fountain show outside the Bellagio, a spectacle repeated every 15 minutes.

A Fat Fairy (I gave him five bucks for this shot so he won't mind me calling him that) and his buddy, something out of Transformers, at a guess.

A Fat Fairy (I gave him five bucks for this shot so he won’t mind me calling him that) and his buddy, something out of Transformers, at a guess.

The restrained and tasteful reception area of Caesar's Palace.

The restrained and tasteful reception area of Caesar’s Palace.

The Strip consists of a string of re-created cities, from Venice complete with a Grand Canal and gondoliers to Paris with its Eiffel Tower and, pictured here, New York New York. Ridiculous.

The Strip consists of a string of re-created cities, from Venice complete with a Grand Canal and gondoliers to Paris with its Eiffel Tower and, pictured here, New York New York. Ridiculous.

The ceiling of the reception at the Bellagio Hotel/Resort/Casino features an extraordinary installation of 2,000 hand-blown glass flowers, the Fioro di Como by Dale Chihuly.

The ceiling of the reception at the Bellagio Hotel/Resort/Casino features an extraordinary installation of 2,000 hand-blown glass flowers, the Fioro di Como by Dale Chihuly.

Do take a look at previous Six Picks posts if you’ve enjoyed your visit, and keep an eye out for future posts. You’ll find more shots from Vegas on my web site – just click here.

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Six Picks: Outcastes – a Village in Odisha, India

28 Tuesday Oct 2014

Posted by Tim Bird in Uncategorized

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Caste, charity, Dalit, DocImages.fi, India, multimedia, Odisha, Tikau Share, travel, travel photography, village

Dear oh dear, no entry for many weeks, this won’t do. My other blog – perhaps I’d better combine them from now on – at birdseyeview.me revealed my latest big news but I seem to have neglected my vast and loyal readership on Six Picks with those developments.

So here it is: at the beginning of the month I launched an online multimedia documentary called Outcastes – a Village in Odisha, India, telling the story of, yes, you guessed it, a village in Odisha, India. The village in question is a Dalit, or so-called Untouchable village, and it’s the target of the Tikau Share charity with which I’ve been working for the last couple of years.

Screen Shot 2014-10-28 at 6.28.23 PM

No pictures on the blog this time – I’m going to direct you straight to the project, made in collaboration with, and with the guidance of, an old – let’s say “long-term” – Finnish photographer friend Kari Kuukka, who is something of a wizard when it comes to multimedia. I suggested that our village would make a good story for his DocImages.fi site, he agreed, and this is the result. We know it’s not perfect, but we think it does more than hint at the possibilities of using multimedia elements to tell important stories.

I recommend a fast and reliable internet connection, and you can view it in three ways:

As a website which works across all platforms:

http://www.docimages.org/publications/outcastes/intro/

As a iPad specific publication through an app:

https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/docimages/id796410557?ls=1&mt=8

As an iBook in the iTunes store:

https://itunes.apple.com/fi/book/outcastes/id927469532?mt=11

Feedback more than welcome as ever. And do drop in to my travel photography web site at www.timbirdphotography.com

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