Saturday, November 2, 2019

In Sight: The best photography we've seen this week

In Sight
A curated view of your world in photographs

 

 

The Best Photos of the Week

(Jonathan Newton /The Washington Post)
Here are 13 of the week's best photos
The Washington Nationals defeat the Houston Astros in Game 7 of the World Series, wildfires in Calif., A divided House approves a resolution formally authorizing and articulating guidelines for the next phase of its impeachment inquiry. Here's a look at 13 of the best photos from the week, selected by photo editors at The Washington Post.

 

 

In Sight

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(Jeremie Jung/SIGNATURES)
Perspective
Life, death and preserving tradition on an Estonian island of only a few hundred people
Photographer Jeremie Jung explores life on Kihnu.
(Gregory Halpern)
Perspective
A new photography book meditates on what it means to be male and American in the Midwest
Gregory Halpern's "Omaha Sketchbook" brings together years of observations from the Midwestern city.

 

 

Must-see photo stories

(Brian L. Frank/The Washington Post)
Tech billionaires have turned Halloween into a circus
Much like the tech industry itself, the Halloween festivities have rapidly scaled from an organic attempt at connection into something unrecognizable.
(Tristan Spinski for The Washington Post)
China loves Maine lobster, but Trump's trade war means Canada is filling the demand
Beijing's tariffs have gutted exports of the Maine delicacy — and position Canada to fill the growing demand, perhaps permanently.
(Salwan Georges/The Washington Post
Mars Inc. wants to be a green company. The problem is where its chocolate comes from.
The global appetite for chocolate threatens West Africa, which supplies most of the world's cocoa. A decade after Mars and other chocolate makers vowed to stop rampant deforestation, the problem has gotten worse.
(Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post)
One more year on the farm: A photographic narrative of a family's fight to save their land
The Post is chronicling the Krocak family through spring, summer, autumn and winter
(Phil Kline for The Washington Post)
What's for lunch?
What kids are eating — and where, when and why — in eight schools across the country
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