For decades, Kodak's Shirley cards, like this one, featured only white models. Kodak hide caption
A Fiesta plate in its "natural environment" with other dishes. luluqlou/Instagram hide caption
A striking image of autumn trees lining a drive in Vermont. reinschreiber/Instagram hide caption
Raeanne Rubenstein first photographed Johnny Cash at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tenn. "It was just the most amazing experience," she says. Raeanne Rubenstein hide caption
Tom Murphy, San Francisco, 1948 gelatin silver print The Minor White Archive, Princeton University Art Museum hide caption
Popsicle: puggle mix, 9 weeks. Seth Casteel/Courtesy of Little, Brown and Co. hide caption
Zhang Kechun. Under the Abandoned Pier, 2013-2014. Zhang, 34, spent years shooting photos along the Yellow River. Zhang Kechun/Courtesy of Three Shadows +3 Gallery hide caption
British photographer James Ostrer named his photographs after the European codes for food additives. James Ostrer hide caption
An eagle flies over Bali's Barat National Park, in this award-winning image taken by a camera attached to a drone. capungaero/Dronestagram hide caption
James Lee often has to pick up his 100-pound son, Justin. Photographer Andrew Nixon shot this photo in an effort to show how being caregivers affects the aging parents. Andrew Nixon/Capital Public Radio hide caption
Left, gray squirrel. Right, crostini with squirrel meat, white mulberry, goat cheese, hazelnut and purslane. Christopher Testani hide caption
"The real reason we're down here is for the art of Salvation Mountain." - Kirsten and Adam in Slab City, Calif. Andrew Waits hide caption
It's easy to feel overwhelmed by our ability to create an infinite stream of images. But if you take the time to stop and be mindful before you click, your photo collection will become much more manageable. Kainaz Amaria/Instagram hide caption
Debra Jenson, 2, hanging from a hook in her grandmother's kitchen. "Over the next 35 years, I watched each of my cousins, then my own children and my cousins' children be dangled from that hook. Between the photo and watching it happen to others, this is a powerful 'fake memory' for me." Debra Jenson/Instagram hide caption
Rebecca Woolf takes a lot of photos of her children for her blog, Girl's Gone Child, but says she tries to not let the camera get in the middle of a moment. Courtesy of Rebecca Woolf hide caption