The second article of the first issue of the Green Tea Gallery Magazine is out! Enjoy the talk with Luke Copping, a talented fashion photographer from Buffalo, NY.
In the second article of the first issue of the Green Tea Gallery Magazine, we interviewed Luke Copping. Born in Canada and raised in the United States he has experience as a photographer, graphic designer and web designer.
The interview with Tim Gallo, a talented Russian photographer who lives in Tokyo, Japan, opens the series of online articles that will be at some point followed by the free PDF version of the magazine.
I would like to thank Tim and all the other authors for the time and the energies spent on this project.
Tim Gallo, Russian by birth, in the past few years has lived in Tokyo. In the very first article of the Green Tea Gallery Magazine, he describes his photographies as movie stills. “Many people say that my photography looks like stills from a movie. I think this is because I usually create a story before I shoot anything.”
Well, I guess the news is pretty obvious since you are right in front of it… Yes, we have an entirely redesigned new website!
I simply couldn’t stand the amateurish look of the blog we used to have before. Thanks to Arun Kale for the beautiful magazine wordpress skin “The morning after“.
On December 9th, 2006 my father passed away and I would like to use a little space on this home page to remember him. Everything I do is a tribute to his life and the Green Tea Gallery is just another project dedicated to him. I hope you like it, dad!
This picture, “Blue Architecture” by Blanca Viñas, is the 1000th image submitted to the Green Tea Gallery!
The Green Tea Gallery magazine is a non-profit project that promotes some of the greatest photographers that have joined the gallery since its opening.
The editing of the first issue has already started! Read more about it and take a peek at some of the pages of the magazine!
Michel has agreed to do a free logo study for the Green Tea Gallery. These are some of the many results he sent me today in a large pdf presentation. I have been loving Michel’s work for a long time on Flickr. His relationship with inks and colors is so intense that every stroke is like a poem.