Photo by Ray Potes
More photos from our upcoming book, SF EYES.
Photo by Alex Martinez
Photo by Ted Pushinsky
Photo by David Potes
Photo Magazine
Photo by Ray Potes
More photos from our upcoming book, SF EYES.
Photo by Alex Martinez
Photo by Ted Pushinsky
Photo by David Potes
Photo by Troy Holden
Today is Hamburger Eyes 18th bday! Thanks for sticking with us, I know it has been a long and winding road. Here are photos from our upcoming book, SF EYES published by Hat and Beard Press. Celebrate with us on Feb 27th!
Photo by David Uzzardi
Photo by Chris Beale
Photo by Kappy
Photo by Joe Plonsker
Photo by Thatcher Keats
Photo by Arthur Pollock
Photo by Jefferson Caine Lankford
Photo by Tommaso Sacconi
Photo by Fernanda Peruzzo
Photo by Louis Fabries
Photo by Casey Jones
Photo by Samuel Liebert
Photo by Steve Panariti
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Photo by David Molina Gadea
More previews from our upcoming issue. Very excited to start the New Year with this one. Have a look and help us get this issue out by pre-ordering it today.
Happy New Years! May all of your wildest dreams come true.
HAMBURGER EYES No. 37
The Continuing Story of Life on Earth
Chris Leskovsek
Mike Vos
Chim Sis
Laurent Meirieu
Mickey Mason
Finn Jubak
Graham Wiebe
Thea Storz
Adi Segal
Alessandro Mitola
David Molina Gadea
120 Pages
6.69″ x 9.61″
Black and White
Matte Cover / Text
Perfect Bind
Published by Hamburger Eyes
CLICK HERE TO PRE-ORDER AND GET A DISCOUNT
Photo by Alessandro Mitola
Photo by Adi Segal
Photo by Graham Wiebe
Photo by Thea Storz
Photo by Mickey Mason
Photo by Finn Jubak
Photo by Laurent Meirieu
Photo by Chim Sis
Photo by Mike Vos
Photo by Chris Leskovsek
** Just to clear up any confusion: This is the 200th title of books and zines that we have published since we started counting as Hamburger Eyes “The Publisher”. As for Hamburger Eyes “The Photozine”, this issue would be number 37. (Some people have posted it as our 200th issue on social media, but it’s misleading and confusing I know. Sorry. Click here to see the whole CATALOG.)
Photo by Chris Leskovsek
Pre-order our latest upcoming issue, Hamburger Eyes No. 37. We need to raise a little more funds to help get this issue out the oven and onto your plate.
This issue is 120 pages with 11 photographers. It contains photos from Peru, Spain, France, Israel, Indonesia, Canada, Italy, and more.
This will be our 200th title so it is an exciting way for us to start the new year.
Order today and get a discount! This issue will ship hopefully by 2nd week of January. Thanks in advance for your continued inspiration and support.
HAMBURGER EYES No. 37
The Continuing Story of Life on Earth
Chris Leskovsek
Mike Vos
Chim Sis
Laurent Meirieu
Mickey Mason
Finn Jubak
Graham Wiebe
Thea Storz
Adi Segal
Alessandro Mitola
David Molina Gadea
120 Pages
6.69″ x 9.61″
Black and White
Matte Cover / Text
Perfect Bind
Published by Hamburger Eyes
$17 on sale today!
Photo by Mike Vos
Photo by Chim Sis
Photo by Laurent Meirieu
Photo by Mickey Mason
Photo by Finn Jubak
Photo by Graham Wiebe
Photo by Thea Storz
Photo by Adi Segal
Photo by Alessandro Mitola
Photo by David Molina Gadea
Photo by Jimmy Kim
Photo by Vaclav Tvaruzka
Photo by Angela Boatwright
Photo by Ben Gore
Photo by Blake
New photos from Elmo Tide.
Photos by Caleb Stein
Text by Amitava Kumar
I don’t know what post-industrial decline means. It is a vague notion in my head. Boarded-up homes, the husk of dead factories with broken windows and overgrown grass, businesses gone to seed. And the people? The people are missing in this picture of decay in my mind. When I first came to Poughkeepsie fifteen years ago, I was told by an academic that while there were pockets of prosperity in Hudson Valley, this town had suffered from post-industrial decline. I’m not a sociologist and I cannot say with certainty if such a statement is even true. But what draws me to Caleb Stein’s images is that he provides us the people missing from my mental picture. And what’s surprising about these images, no, what’s honest about them is that instead of people, we get faces. Individual lives. Their wealth of stories and secrets are shielded from us—mysteries that we cannot part—but we wonder and ask questions because that is what I think the photographer himself is doing. Hello? How are you? How is your day going? I imagine him asking this over and over again with the same people who then begin to treat him as a neighbor that he undoubtedly is. The photographer as everyman. On the street, in parks, and at the watering hole where we see that his eye is as clear as the water. Consider the remarkable image of the Prom Boy, a picture taken on the street on which I live. This image does fill me with wonder. Such a fine, even tender, mix of contradictions: the large flower in the buttonhole, the bandage on the nose, the slightly askew bowtie, the bruised eye, the stubbornly dignified gaze… I could go on. I don’t know whether I’m right or wrong in saying any of this about the young man. All I can be certain about is that this is what living is about, this tussle with the real, this strange encounter across divisions of race and class, in a rectangular visual space. This is life.