Chris Gampat is an editor, founder and publisher of a phoblographer. Provides supervision of all every day tasks, including editorial, administrative and promoting works. Chris’s editorial works include not only editing and planning articles, but additionally writing independently. He is the creator of varied product guides, educational works, product reviews and interviews with photographers. He is fascinated by how photographers create, making an allowance for the proven fact that he’s legally blind./ The most significant: Chris worked in the approach to life and technology of men. He is an experienced author, editor and reviewer with over 15 years of experience. He can be a photographer who had its participation in lines and viral projects equivalent to “Secret Order of the Slice”. Past lines: Gear Patrol, PC Mag, Geek.com, Digital Photo Pro, Resource magazine, Yahoo! News, Yahoo! Finance, IGN, PDN and others.
EXPERIENCE:
Chris Gampat began working in technological and artistic journalism each in 2008. He began at PCMAG, Magnum Photos and Geek.com. He founded Phoblograph in 2009 after work in places equivalent to PDN and Photography Bay. At the start of 2010 he left his every day work as a social content programmer within the B&H photo. Since then, he has evolved as an publisher using AI ethically, inventing ethical ways to bring partner income and proclaiming the word of diversity within the photographic industry. His origin and work spread to non-profit organizations, equivalent to American photographic arts wherein he did work to get various advantages. His skills are search engine optimisation, application development, content planning, ethics management, photography, wordpress and other things. Education: Chris graduated from Magna Cum Laude on the University of Adelphi with a communication diploma from journalism in 2009. Since then, he has learned and adapted to varied things in the sector of social media, search engine optimisation, application development, e-commerce development, HTML, etc. Favorite topic: Chris likes to create conceptual work that causes people to be created in his photos. But it doesn’t do much of it due to high demand for the contents of the photograph. / Best photography Tip: Do not do it in post -production when you’ll be able to do it within the camera.