Nick Rico shoots more than just Porsche, but if you haven't noticed we're pretty big fans of the marque at Petrolicious, and his P-car photos are the best in his portfolio. It's hard to make a 935 look ugly, but it's also hard to capture the sense of purpose and overall ferocity of these cars. Nick's style makes great use of depth of field to give the cars in his frames a distinct pop against their surroundings, and it almost verges on a tilt shift look at times. The colors are alternate between pale and sunny tones and some with a bit more murkiness, depending. In any light though, he makes the cars stand out as they should.
David Carlo's portfolio on Instagram is a hectic collection of black and whites and warm colors, motorcycles and hot rods, people and places. The term photojournalism is used a bit too often I think, but here it seems fitting. Beyond some really sharp and well-framed static images, David's in-action work is the really good stuff—the illustrative photos that couldn't be described in a thousand words. It's nice to see a blend between the mechanical and the human, and the interspersed portraits lend a vitality and relatability to the hot-rodding hijinks.
Keoni B.'s account is sort of a like a diary, complete with a not-so-secret crush on a certain Diamond Schwartz E30. The car itself is a great example of the popular Bimmer chassis, and the photos Keoni takes do justice to the sharp lines and tasteful modifications that've been added over time. The pair travels all around California with frequent stops for photos along the way. They also run into plenty of Bavarian buddies, so expect to see a few 2002s, E9s, and other vintage Germans on this Instagram page.
Laurent Nivalle points his camera at more than just cars, so among the big barges of American iron and the functional aggression of race cars you'll find some portraits of people, highway on-ramps, jets, buildings, shrubs, fences, just about everything. And just about all of it looks like hours of prep and post work went into the final result. Of course, some of these are surely spur of the moment snapshots, but you can only make such things look this good if you've put in the time to learn the art. Laurent certainly has, with wonderful contrasting black and whites adjacent to big swaths of neon ambiance.
The "fifth spot" photographer we'd like to share with you this week is Johannes Hulsch, who specializes in landscapes. It's not all mountain ranges and national parks though, as Johannes takes it upon himself to seek out the structures humans have made in these fascinating patches of the earth's terrain. Little cottages snuggled between evergreens, hundreds-of-years-old churches puncturing the cloud membrane at elevation, ski resorts perched on barren summits—in so many of his shots there is this marriage of nature and our attempts to live among its most exotic expressions.
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