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10 Classic Photographs — Reinterpreted Entirely in Play-Doh

Added on by Hattie Crisell.

The artist Eleanor Macnair is an expert on the subject of Play-Doh. Different colors have different textures, she explains: “The whites are usually very soft; the black’s quite oily.” The children who play with the modeling clay probably haven’t noticed, but Play-Doh is Macnair’s palette: She uses it to recreate her favorite images from the world of documentary photography, then captures her versions on camera.

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The Photographer Who Captured People Driving in Los Angeles

Added on by Hattie Crisell.

“I wanted to do something that would have a little humor to it, and maybe a little riskiness,” the photographer Mike Mandel says. His new book, “People in Cars” out next month, does just that: It’s a collection of snapshots he took in 1970s California as a 19-year-old kid. “I grew up in Los Angeles and all of my experience of being in L.A. was about going from one place to the other by car,” he recalls.

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A Cool, Genderqueer Label to Know

Added on by Hattie Crisell.

When he wasn’t bartending his way through Central Saint Martins, Charles Jeffrey was hosting Loverboy, a monthly club night at London’s VFDalston. He now spends most of his time being a proper men’s wear designer, though “proper” hardly describes his anarchic aesthetic.

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Old Photographs That Capture America at a Crossroads

Added on by Hattie Crisell.

"There’s an old French expression: The nearer the gallows, the clearer the truth,” says the documentary photographer Joel Sternfeld. “And my truth began with Walker Evans.” The iconic photographer of the Great Depression was a key inspiration on Sternfeld’s own influential 1987 photography book “American Prospects,” images from which go on display at London’s Beetles+Huxley gallery this week, alongside pictures that have never been shown before.

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In London’s Silver Vaults With Mulberry’s New Design Star

Added on by Hattie Crisell.

On a recent afternoon on London’s Chancery Lane, Johnny Coca, the creative director of Mulberry, was browsing the underground marketplace of the London Silver Vaults — a warren of around 30 subterranean shops that has become one of his favorite places since he moved here six years ago. “I think it’s a very unexpected place,” he said, conspiratorially. “It’s kind of like a jewel display for me, because you can see all these antique silver products from the past.”

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Oddball British Rituals, in Playful Vintage Photos

Added on by Hattie Crisell.

A town mayor perched on a weighing scale; men dressed as clowns, dancing in the street; a crowd pursuing a rolling cheese down a hillside: At first glance, it’s not entirely clear what’s going on in this arresting series of early-70s images by the British photographer Homer Sykes, who spent seven years documenting obscure annual traditions taking place in communities around Britain.

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In London, a Celebration of All Things Punk

Added on by Hattie Crisell.

“Punk itself was about being on the cutting edge of anything new,” says the photographer Anita Corbin, whose portraits of women in the punk scene are on show at the Photographers’ Gallery in London this weekend. “So if you could shock people by wearing ripped tights and piercing your mouth — that would be a great statement to show the authorities that we were young and we weren’t too innocent anymore.”

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A Nigerian Designer, Inspired by Home

Added on by Hattie Crisell.

For the 26-year-old Nigerian designer Adebayo Oke-Lawal, whose brand Orange Culture held a presentation in a showroom at London Collections Men this weekend, fashion is a very personal business. “We’re trying to communicate the idea of a new generation of African men,” he told T of the intentions behind his gender-fluid men’s wear line.

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Personal (and Romantic) Vintage Pictures From a Legendary Photographer

Added on by Hattie Crisell.

“He was a real cockney, Bert, and he loved his jellied eels,” Sue Davies, the founding director of London’s The Photographers’ Gallery, says of the British photographer Bert Hardy — with whom she used to have regular lunches until his death in 1995. This Friday, her gallery will open a new exhibition and sale of some of Hardy’s favorite original prints, which were saved as keepsakes in his private collection and have never before been displayed.

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In Dublin, a Photographer Turns His Lens on the Street

Added on by Hattie Crisell.

Until two years ago, the photographer Eamonn Doyle, whose new work “End.” goes on show at London’s Michael Hoppen Gallery this May, was not known for his photographs. After graduating art college in 1991, he founded a record label and a festival in his native Dublin, immersing himself in the local music scene for almost 20 years. It was after the economic crash in 2008 that, feeling burned out and in need of a change, he bought a camera and began to photograph life on the streets around his home.

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