


Cheryl Rose
I spent a while recently enjoying the colours of New England on a dark winter’s morning courtesy of Cheryl Rose’s photostream. Each time we look at another photographer’s work we open a window on their world, and the way that they see it. more

Finding Flow through Mindfulness
Each one of us possesses an abundance of creative thought and insight. Each of us sees the world in a completely unique way and nobody can say that the way we see the world is wrong. more

Of a Big One, not up a Big One
Every winter we see lots of images of snow-covered peaks in the glow of dawn or dusk light and most of us think “That’s fantastic, but there is no way I could get up a mountain to take photos like these”. more

David Baker
You’ll have to go back to August 2011 and Issue 20 to find Tim’s original Featured Photographer interview with David Baker. This pre-dates both Sea Fever and Ridge Trees, although David’s fascination with the coast was already evident. more

In Turner’s Footsteps
I was particularly keen to learn how Turner depicted the relationship between sea and sky so brilliantly as part of the appeal of Turner’s work more

After All This Time
I usually spend over 160 days a year travelling so to be at home is often rewarded by an overwhelming sense of comfort and warmth. This, in turn, has led to ‘home’ meaning one thing, and my photography becoming something entirely separate. more

Graham Cook
It’s those moments of perfect harmony when I’m closest to becoming myself and when I’ve been able to release the shackles of behaviour and attitude that contrive to impair free thinking. more

Say Yes
Saying “yes” means possessing a mind free of judgment and expectations and being open to whatever might come our way. more

Photographing for Others
If I woke up tomorrow to find a world in which I was the only human being (coincidentally, one of my favourite recurring dreams), I would still photograph? more

The Photo Book
There are different reasons why books provide enlightenment and meaning which is absent from other supports. more

Thierry Bornier
Perhaps the thing that strikes me most about Thierry’s poetic images of China is that it is very much a manmade and managed landscape, and also a peopled landscape. more

The Power of Transitions
The art of linguistic creativity relies heavily on tools of communication; words, punctuation, articulation, metaphor and nuance. more

Steve Palmer
The Hothouse series came about just by chance when I visited London with friends for a week. One day we visited Kew Gardens and were walking past one side of the Water Lily House. more

Jon Gibbs
Tim spoke to Jon Gibbs for our Featured Photographer spot back in March 2013. Jon was the very first winner of Take A View’s UK Landscape Photographer of the Year competition in 2007 more

The Difference
People who see a photograph and later visit the place where the photograph was made, expecting to see this place as it appears in the photograph, and instead finding it different, may feel “cheated". more