Dublin 8, last weekend.
Colum Cronin tweetz:
I really like this photo but I can’t quite put my finger on why. Perhaps it’s the 70s/80s vibe to it, like a movie I can’t quite remember.
Obligatory: name that jammer.
Dublin 8, last weekend.
Colum Cronin tweetz:
I really like this photo but I can’t quite put my finger on why. Perhaps it’s the 70s/80s vibe to it, like a movie I can’t quite remember.
Obligatory: name that jammer.
‘sup?
Donal Moloney writes:
One of the personal projects I’ve been exploring over the last year or two is the romance we have with horses in Ireland.
Whether it’s a horse fair in Ballinasloe, a hunt in Meath, racing on the sand at Laytown, harness racing in Portmarnock, one thing that always seems to be consistent is that we do love our horses.
Recently I decided to check out the Dressage scene. The athleticism, agility and beauty of these animals is amazing. Here’s a few shots I did last week. at a private residence in Kildare…
Donal Moloney Photography (Facebook)
Previously: Donal Moloney on Broadsheet.
This morning.
DJ Jason Dee writes:
A musician reflecting outside the now closed HMV in Henry Street [Dublin 1]. A penny for his thoughts?
Previously: Hmmv

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gja9xgbNMlA&feature=youtu.be
Dublin photograpaher Keneth O’Halloran records reactions to the Donald Trump star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Hollywood Boulevard, Los Angeles, California.
Part of a book project entitled Bing Bing Bong Bong Bing Bing Bing about The Donald’s Hollywood star.
Buy book here
[Ormond Quay, Dublin early 1990s]
Twenty years in the making.
Photographer David Jazay writes:
“Like a one-man Google car (with a heart), I managed to preserve the Liffey Quays, long before digital stitching techniques were invented. This is also the reason it took me 20 years to realise my vision of an immersive, high resolution photographic documentation of Dublin’s Inner City. I simply had to wait for computing power to catch up with what I had in mind.”
Dublin’s Inner City Reconstructed Through Photography by David Jazay (PB)
More images here: David Jazay
Thanks AF
[Alex Sapienza and one of his portraits using ‘traditional’ techniques]
Instagram or 19th Century methods?
YOU decide.
Liam Geraghty writes:
Old and new photographic techniques slug it out for the eyeballs of the 21st century on RTÉ Lyric fm’s Culture File [featuring damn hot Dublin-based analogue hipster photographer Alex Sapienza]Listen here:
Mark McGuinness writes:
I’m a Dublin based photographer. I just set up my first site and thought you might be interested in it seeing as most of the photos are taken in Ireland. I went out to a pier a few days ago and took some shots that I think you might like, Summer isnt over yet…
Name that pier/fish anyone?
From Smithfield Market to the Dunsink dump in Finglas.
An Unexpected End.
By Italy-born, Dublin-based photographer Gianpaolo la Paglia.
Barbra Leonard writes:
With the many sad and and sorry tales of horses in the media at the moment the following photostory may be of interest to your readers. It really is hard to believe that these beautiful animals are coming to such a horrible Unexpected End here in Ireland. This project was made in 2010 and as of yet the story is not getting any better for the horses of Ireland
And sure that’s what has us ruined.
Taken by Ruby Gordon Peterkin in the Summer of 1916,
Location unknown but possibly the wesht..
Thanks Sibling of Daedalus