MujuMaps by Adrian Galli

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Cartography has also fascinated me—not just from a details and information standpoint but also a design standpoint. Maps, by necessity, must be highly functional but with some good design, can also be beautiful.

MujuMaps takes the ancient art of cartography and merges it with modern, minimalist design. I’ve had my eye on them for some time and have a few cities I can’t wait to have hanging on my wall.

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Clean and simple and a few color options, prints start at 50 x 70 cm. Check out their site and get your favorite city printed.

MujuMaps

Price: $60

Images courtesy of MujuMaps

Top 5 Pieces of Gear Every Photographer Must Have by Adrian Galli

Sorry, I got you to click. It is a clickbait title but bear with me for a moment.  

I read a lot of technology articles and a lot of them are about photography or cinematic gear. I’m the first to admit I LOVE new gadgets and gear but I also am very pragmatic about what is needed versus what is wanted. I will spend good money for good gear but I'm also a huge fan of doing a lot with less.

A lot of articles about photo gear are all “you need this to be a photographer” or whatever... blah, blah, blah.

So here is my list:

  1. Camera
  2. Lens
  3. Memory card or film
  4. Tripod  
  5. Lens cleaner

That’s it. Don’t be duped by people telling you that your camera is not good enough or your lens is bad or whatever. Go out and shoot. If you said, "Adrian, I have $500 and want to be a photographer," I'd say, "you can get everything above."

  1. Nikon D3100 — $239
  2. Nikon 35mm f1.8g DX— $166
  3. Sandisk 16GB SD Card — $11
  4. Polaroid 42" Travel Tripod — $17
  5. Zeiss Lens Cleaner Kit — $30

A grand total of $463. It may not be superlative gear but you’ll be photographing. And that’s more than can be said about a lot of gear reviewing and blogging clowns. Check out a few examples of photographs taken with the Nikon D3100 and Nikon 35mm DX lens.

Adrian's Life Rule #56: Go out and shoot.

Climate Change at a Glance — NOAA, AXIOS by Adrian Galli

Chart courtesy of Chris Canipe, AXIOS

Chart courtesy of Chris Canipe, AXIOS

Seven of the warmest years on record have occurred since 2010. Reliable record keeping and measurement of the climate has taken place since 1880. And with our most powerful technologies, satellites, super computers, and more, NOAA and the rest of the scientific world are watching closely.

Sources:

NOAA, June 22, 2018

Chris Canipe, AXIOS, June 21, 2018

New York Times, January 18, 2018