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The Maine Media Workshops offer over 400 workshops and master classes in the fields of photography, filmmaking, and multimedia. Each year it attracts over 2,000 students, from professionals to beginners. Workshops range in length from a single weekend to a seven-week work-study program and a 12-week summer residency.
In 2006, he announced he would put the entire organization up for sale. A group of faculty and staff began a campaign to acquire the workshops and college as a nonprofit organization. [5] Their campaign was successful, with the new nonprofit Maine Media Workshops taking over in 2007. [4] The school was subsequently renamed Maine Media College. [6]
[3] After a second stay in Providence, he returned to Norridgewock to concentrate on his scenic, mostly local, photographs. Soon after a fire in 1904, Charles, his wife Mary and son Harold settled in Farmington, Maine, next to Norridgewock, to start a new life. Coincidentally, it was the same year that Wallace Nutting opened his first studio in ...
The University of Maine Press is a university press that is part of the University of Maine. It is a Division of the Raymond H. Fogler Library. According to the Press, "the diverse cultural heritage of Northern New England, Quebec, and the Maritimes is the Press’s central interest.
Lew Dietz (22 May 1906 – 27 April 1997) [1] was an American writer, much of whose work centered on his native Maine.In a long career he produced 20 books and hundreds of magazine articles for Down East magazine (which he helped establish [2]), True, Yankee, Redbook, Coast Fisherman and Outdoors Maine among others.
Fred Spira (1924–2007) was an inventor and innovator in photography as well as a collector of photographic equipment, images, books, and ephemera. He is credited as one of three individuals who opened up the U.S. market to quality Japanese photographic goods. [1]
The first library established in Camden was known as the Federal Society's Library, and was started in 1796 with a collection of 200 books. [3] At that time, Camden was a very small town consisting of 15 houses centered on the harbor. The Federal Society's Library operated for 34 years until the books were sold at auction.
The project took fourteen more years to complete. The book contains 427 pages, fifteen chapters (plus a detailed appendix), was printed on antique book paper and bound in gold-stamped cloth. It was printed by Portland's Southworth–Anthoensen Press, based at 105 Middle Street. [4] It was on sale for $5 at the time of its initial release. [5]