Q&A with Dr. Matt Lato I learned the hard way about how important accurate visualizations are. Exhibit A: A trail map without any indication of elevation or warning…
Q&A with Paola Marino Microscopes allow researchers to visualize seemingly invisible things. But practical purposes aside, these glimpses into the microscopic world often look like works of art.…
Q&A with Paul Sokoloff From the Canadian Arctic to the deserts of Southern Utah, Paul Sokoloff captures the beauty of nature from the plants in the ground to…
Q&A with Veronica Coppolaro From collecting data on sea ice to photographing polar bears, we’re going above and below Arctic waters with Veronica Coppolaro. A PhD student at…
Q&A with Robert Izett Whether it's glare off helicopter windows or drones that want to fly themselves home, Robert Izett is well-versed on the struggles of photographing from…
Q&A with Balint Kacsoh Tending to ant farms, catching butterflies, digging for worms: activities we might pair in our minds with childhood. Children are fascinated by insects but…
Q&A with Valesca de Groot With leaky housing kits and uncooperative models brushing you off with a flip of a fin or dismissive pincer, photographing life under water…
Q&A with Dr. Christian Lacroix It’s been the “Year of the Hobby”. Gardening being one of many pastimes taken up during our time at home. Perhaps you spent…
Q&A with Dr. Melania Cristescu With pipette tip boxes that disappointingly never fill themselves, failed polymerase chain reactions, and gel images that can feel an awful lot like…
Q&A with Aaron Scott Picture this: fluorescent green cells dancing inside a fluorescent red pulsing shape, the heart of a zebrafish. It looks an awful lot like a…