Showing posts with label Light Leaks Magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Light Leaks Magazine. Show all posts

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Featured in the Light Leaks Gallery, the LAST Issue, Sniff, Sniff....


Light Leaks Magazine, Issue 19, Secrets

Light Leaks, Issue #19, arrived in my mailbox yesterday. It was a bittersweet moment, because I knew one of my images was being featured in the gallery, but I also knew it was the last issue ever. Yet another one of my favourite magazines is no longer being printed. Here is what Mike Barnes and his wife, Rachel, had to say about their decision, in an email sent out about 2.5 months ago:

"As you know, we have struggled to keep Light Leaks in print over the past year. We had an excellent plan—with the addition of the Light Leaks Shop and Holgapalooza we felt the financial difficulties could be resolved. Unfortunately those additions required more of our own time. With a growing young family, free time has quickly become our most precious commodity.

While we enjoyed working on Light Leaks over the years, we have come to a point where we must focus on our own careers to support our family. My own interest in toy camera photography has always been a hobby, not a profession. Unfortunately as much as I loved putting together Light Leaks I spent most of my time putting together a magazine about toy cameras, but not actually being able to use those toy cameras myself!

Contributing to each issue of Light Leaks magazine was (I think) an excellent use of my time, and I think all those who contributed will feel the same way. It was always a labour of love for an end product that never lacked in quality. For all of you that have been scoffed at for wielding your beloved low-fi cameras, Light Leaks represented you and why you love what you do.

For current subscribers, you believed in us, and we thank you for that. We would be honoured to have you consider your unfulfilled subscription a donation into helping us pay our final printing payments. We can offer you some of the remaining back issues that we have left, or some of the digital versions we have created (which also includes The Toycam Handbook), however supplies are limited. In addition to creating some revenue from the digital issues, we have had to sell off our entire store inventory to help get this last issue to you.

We will be closing the Light Leaks shop, but keeping www.lightleaks.org open along with links to the digital versions.

We want to thank you all for supporting our humble magazine, and especially to those who contributed over the years, particularly Gary Moyer, Steph Parke, and of course my wife, Rachel who did a lot of the work behind the scenes. Best to you all in your future low-fi photographic adventures!

Mike Barnes (toycamera@rogers.com)"

My little one...

...hamming it up

My image, Talking Walls, is a Holgaroid double exposure, made using a Holga CNF 120 with a Polaroid back. The original image is on chocolate Type 80 film from impossible project, which has shades of brown and pink, but it was printed in black and white for the magazine.
 My photography also appeared in Issue 13, Road Trip and Issue 14, Childhood.
Goodbye, Light Leaks. You were a stellar Canadian publication that toy camera lovers around the world will always remember fondly. Thanks so much!

Sunday, March 22, 2009

My Submission to Light Leaks Was Accepted!!


Road Trip by Tiffany Teske

I had so many good things happen to me on Saturday, that I have had to split up the posts...

On Saturday I received an email that this image was selected for publication in the next issue of Light Leaks Magazine. I am very excited to have been selected to be featured in such a wonderful Canadian magazine that is committed to analog forms of photography ("Photos MUST be taken using a "low-fi" or "toy" camera - meaning the body of the camera must be low-tech with a simple single element lens (Holga, Diana, and the like). We also like cheap Polaroid cameras. We do not accept images from LC-A, Lubitel, or anything digital."). The issue, #13, should be out in the coming weeks. The theme is Road Trip. I will keep you posted...

The guest photo editor, Aline Smithson, is someone whose blog I have been reading and enjoying. Check out, Lenscratch. And for the prude amongst you take a second look at her post for today, those images are not of what you think they are. Very clever!

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Light Leaks 13 Submission


I just emailed my lastest submission to Light Leaks Magazine. Someday, I hope to appear in it's pages.... The theme is Road Trip. Submitted images must have been made with a toy camera or Polaroid camera. This is an image I made on SX-70 film with a Polaroid Land Camera back in 2001 or 2002. It is of my friend Mat, when he, my friend, Gaetane from Belgium, and I took a road trip to NYC. It is a bit mundane but truly captures the essence of being in the car on a road trip...

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Submission to Light Leaks


I Was Here
Polaroid Spectra Double Exposure by Tiffany Teske

Last minute as always, I decided to submit this to Light Leaks, one of my favorite photo magazines. Light Leaks is committed to featuring the work of photographers who work with low fidelity or "toy" cameras: Holgas, Polaroids, Pinhole, Diana, Brownie, Lomo, or Samplers. And if you click on each of those you will have gotten your photography knowledge for the week. I was one day late last time, so I am improving... I got this in with 1 hour 30 minutes remaining. Light Leaks is published in Canada so that is extra cool. The theme of the call for submission is evidence. Should be an interesting bunch of images...

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Light Leaks Submission



Well, I hate to admit it, but the night I was supposed to upload my submission to Light Leaks, for their upcoming Polaroid issue, I put my daughter to bed and promptly fell asleep. Since I do respect the rules that people write for submissions, I would usually not have submitted the following day, but I just had to. I love Light Leaks, they are a Canadian publication dedicated to low fidelity photography, and I would be so happy to be featured in it's pages... Here was my submission, which I have posted here before. It is a double exposure made using Spectra film.