27 Feb 2009
Olympus leaves the planet Earth
Olivier Laurent
To celebrating its 90th Anniversary, Olympus has launched its own space project (i.e. a marketing coup).
Last November, Olympus supplied its pro digital SLR, the E-3, a dust-proof and splash-proof camera (not that there is a high-risk for the camera to be exposed to water while in space), to the Japanese astronaut Dr. Koichi Wakata, who is now in the ‘Kibo’ (meaning ‘hope’), the Japanese Experimental Module on the International Space Station.
Wakata will engage in the mission of becoming a space photographer and documenting status of the Earth for several months. According to Olympus, the resulting images will be released ‘in various different forms’.
The project focuses on the environmental situation of the Earth today and speculating its possible image of ‘tomorrow’, thus increasing the awareness of the consequences of Global Warming. To see Wakata's pictures, visit olympus-space-project.com.
Comments
Blog roll
- 5b4
- 1000 Words Photography
- A Photo Editor
- A Visual Society
- BagNews
- BagNews (on Tumblr)
- Boston Globe's The Big Picture
- Conscientious
- Conscientious Redux (on Tumblr)
- Duckrabbit
- Foto8
- Food For Your Eyes
- Gawker
- Getty Images' Blog
- Here
- Hotshoe
- Institute for Artist Management
- Invisible Ph t grapher Asia
- Journalism.co.uk
- Lens at The New York Times
- Lens Culture
- Lightstalkers
- Los Angeles Times Photography
- Mastering Multimedia
- Mostly True
- No Caption Needed
- PDN Pulse
- Photo Magazine (France)
- Photojournalismlinks
- Prison Photography
- Prison Photography (on Tumblr)
- Resolve - The liveBooks Photo Blog
- Romenesko
- Rob Galbraith DPI
- Saatchi Online
- StockPhotoTalk
- Telephoto
- The 37th Frame
- The Big Picture
- The Daily Nice
- The Click
- The Online Photographer
- The Russian Photos Blog
- The Travel Photographer
- Vice Magazine
- Wall Street Journal's Photo Blog
- WarShooter
- What's the jackanory?

















