Okay guys. I got a camera given to me for my birthday from my dad and it ends up its the same camera my mum gave me. I was going to sell it but I decided I needed to thank my followers for well….being awesome. So heres a Canon Rebel.
All you have to do is:FOLLOW ME http://www.marilynskates.tumblr.com
and REBLOG THIS likes do not count.
I will choose the winner on 1st May 2012
So off you go. :)
Silent World by Lucie & Simon have captured some of the world’s most populated cities completely devoid of any human activity.
Okay guys. I got a camera given to me for my birthday from my dad and it ends up its the same camera my mum gave me. I was going to sell it but I decided I needed to thank my followers for well….being awesome. So heres a Canon Rebel.
All you have to do is:FOLLOW ME http://www.marilynskates.tumblr.com
and REBLOG THIS likes do not count.
I will choose the winner on 1st May 2012
So off you go. :)
life:
Of the indispensable photographs taken during the Second World War, Margaret Bourke-White’s image of survivors at Buchenwald in April 1945 — “staring out at their Allied rescuers,” as LIFE magazine put it, “like so many living corpses” — remains among the most haunting. The faces of the men, young and old, staring from behind the wire, “barely able to believe that they would be delivered from a Nazi camp where the only deliverance had been death,” attest with an awful eloquence to the depths of human depravity and, maybe even more powerfully, to the measureless lineaments of human endurance.
On the anniversary of the liberation of Buchenwald by Patton’s Third Army, LIFE.com looks at the story — and at other, harrowing photographs — behind one of the indispensable images from World War II.
Read more here.
(Margaret Bourke-White—Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images)






















