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Automation and Make
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
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A Software Carpentry lesson to learn how to use Make Make is a tool which can run commands to read files, process these files in some way, and write out the processed files. For example, in software development, Make is used to compile source code into executable programs or libraries, but Make can also be used to: run analysis scripts on raw data files to get data files that summarize the raw data; run visualization scripts on data files to produce plots; and to parse and combine text files and plots to create papers. Make is called a build tool - it builds data files, plots, papers, programs or libraries. It can also update existing files if desired. Make tracks the dependencies between the files it creates and the files used to create these. If one of the original files (e.g. a data file) is changed, then Make knows to recreate, or update, the files that depend upon this file (e.g. a plot). There are now many build tools available, all of which are based on the same concepts as Make.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Information Science
Mathematics
Measurement and Data
Material Type:
Module
Provider:
The Carpentries
Author:
Adam Richie-Halford
Ana Costa Conrado
Andrew Boughton
Andrew Fraser
Andy Kleinhesselink
Andy Teucher
Anna Krystalli
Bill Mills
Brandon Curtis
David E. Bernholdt
Deborah Gertrude Digges
François Michonneau
Gerard Capes
Greg Wilson
Jake Lever
Jason Sherman
John Blischak
Jonah Duckles
Juan F Fung
Kate Hertweck
Lex Nederbragt
Luiz Irber
Matthew Thomas
Michael Culshaw-Maurer
Mike Jackson
Pete Bachant
Piotr Banaszkiewicz
Radovan Bast
Raniere Silva
Rémi Emonet
Samuel Lelièvre
Satya Mishra
Trevor Bekolay
Date Added:
03/20/2017
Carpentries Instructor Training
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
Rating
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A two-day introduction to modern evidence-based teaching practices, built and maintained by the Carpentry community.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Education
Higher Education
Information Science
Mathematics
Measurement and Data
Material Type:
Module
Provider:
The Carpentries
Author:
Aleksandra Nenadic
Alexander Konovalov
Alistair John Walsh
Allison Weber
Amy E. Hodge
Andrew B. Collier
Anita Schürch
AnnaWilliford
Ariel Rokem
Brian Ballsun-Stanton
Callin Switzer
Christian Brueffer
Christina Koch
Christopher Erdmann
Colin Morris
Dan Allan
DanielBrett
Danielle Quinn
Darya Vanichkina
David Jennings
Eric Jankowski
Erin Alison Becker
Evan Peter Williamson
François Michonneau
Gerard Capes
Greg Wilson
Ian Lee
Jason M Gates
Jason Williams
Jeffrey Oliver
Joe Atzberger
John Bradley
John Pellman
Jonah Duckles
Jonathan Bradley
Karen Cranston
Karen Word
Kari L Jordan
Katherine Koziar
Katrin Leinweber
Kees den Heijer
Laurence
Lex Nederbragt
Maneesha Sane
Marie-Helene Burle
Mik Black
Mike Henry
Murray Cadzow
Neal Davis
Neil Kindlon
Nicholas Tierney
Nicolás Palopoli
Noah Spies
Paula Andrea Martinez
Petraea
Rayna Michelle Harris
Rémi Emonet
Rémi Rampin
Sarah Brown
Sarah M Brown
Sarah Stevens
Sean
Serah Anne Njambi Kiburu
Stefan Helfrich
Steve Moss
Stéphane Guillou
Ted Laderas
Tiago M. D. Pereira
Toby Hodges
Tracy Teal
Yo Yehudi
amoskane
davidbenncsiro
naught101
satya-vinay
Date Added:
08/07/2020
Databases and SQL
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
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Software Carpentry lesson that teaches how to use databases and SQL In the late 1920s and early 1930s, William Dyer, Frank Pabodie, and Valentina Roerich led expeditions to the Pole of Inaccessibility in the South Pacific, and then onward to Antarctica. Two years ago, their expeditions were found in a storage locker at Miskatonic University. We have scanned and OCR the data they contain, and we now want to store that information in a way that will make search and analysis easy. Three common options for storage are text files, spreadsheets, and databases. Text files are easiest to create, and work well with version control, but then we would have to build search and analysis tools ourselves. Spreadsheets are good for doing simple analyses, but they don’t handle large or complex data sets well. Databases, however, include powerful tools for search and analysis, and can handle large, complex data sets. These lessons will show how to use a database to explore the expeditions’ data.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Information Science
Mathematics
Measurement and Data
Material Type:
Module
Provider:
The Carpentries
Author:
Amy Brown
Andrew Boughton
Andrew Kubiak
Avishek Kumar
Ben Waugh
Bill Mills
Brian Ballsun-Stanton
Chris Tomlinson
Colleen Fallaw
Dan Michael Heggø
Daniel Suess
Dave Welch
David W Wright
Deborah Gertrude Digges
Donny Winston
Doug Latornell
Erin Alison Becker
Ethan Nelson
Ethan P White
François Michonneau
George Graham
Gerard Capes
Gideon Juve
Greg Wilson
Ioan Vancea
Jake Lever
James Mickley
John Blischak
JohnRMoreau@gmail.com
Jonah Duckles
Jonathan Guyer
Joshua Nahum
Kate Hertweck
Kevin Dyke
Louis Vernon
Luc Small
Luke William Johnston
Maneesha Sane
Mark Stacy
Matthew Collins
Matty Jones
Mike Jackson
Morgan Taschuk
Patrick McCann
Paula Andrea Martinez
Pauline Barmby
Piotr Banaszkiewicz
Raniere Silva
Ray Bell
Rayna Michelle Harris
Rémi Emonet
Rémi Rampin
Seda Arat
Sheldon John McKay
Sheldon McKay
Stephen Davison
Thomas Guignard
Trevor Bekolay
lorra
slimlime
Date Added:
03/20/2017
Introduction to Cloud Computing for Genomics
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
Rating
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Data Carpentry lesson to learn how to work with Amazon AWS cloud computing and how to transfer data between your local computer and cloud resources. The cloud is a fancy name for the huge network of computers that host your favorite websites, stream movies, and shop online, but you can also harness all of that computing power for running analyses that would take days, weeks or even years on your local computer. In this lesson, you’ll learn about renting cloud services that fit your analytic needs, and how to interact with one of those services (AWS) via the command line.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Information Science
Mathematics
Measurement and Data
Material Type:
Module
Provider:
The Carpentries
Author:
Abigail Cabunoc Mayes
Adina Howe
Amanda Charbonneau
Bob Freeman
Brittany N. Lasseigne, PhD
Bérénice Batut
Caryn Johansen
Chris Fields
Darya Vanichkina
David Mawdsley
Erin Becker
François Michonneau
Greg Wilson
Jason Williams
Joseph Stachelek
Kari L. Jordan, PhD
Katrin Leinweber
Maxim Belkin
Michael R. Crusoe
Piotr Banaszkiewicz
Raniere Silva
Renato Alves
Rémi Emonet
Stephen Turner
Taylor Reiter
Thomas Morrell
Tracy Teal
William L. Close
ammatsun
vuw-ecs-kevin
Date Added:
03/28/2017
Library Carpentry: Introduction to Git
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
Rating
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Library Carpentry lesson: An introduction to Git. What We Will Try to Do Begin to understand and use Git/GitHub. You will not be an expert by the end of the class. You will probably not even feel very comfortable using Git. This is okay. We want to make a start but, as with any skill, using Git takes practice. Be Excellent to Each Other If you spot someone in the class who is struggling with something and you think you know how to help, please give them a hand. Try not to do the task for them: instead explain the steps they need to take and what these steps will achieve. Be Patient With The Instructor and Yourself This is a big group, with different levels of knowledge, different computer systems. This isn’t your instructor’s full-time job (though if someone wants to pay them to play with computers all day they’d probably accept). They will do their best to make this session useful. This is your session. If you feel we are going too fast, then please put up a pink sticky. We can decide as a group what to cover.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Information Science
Mathematics
Measurement and Data
Material Type:
Module
Provider:
The Carpentries
Author:
222064h
Alex Mendes
Alexander Gary Zimmerman
Alexander Mendes
Amiya Maji
Amy Olex
Andrew Lonsdale
Annika Rockenberger
Begüm D. Topçuoğlu
Belinda Weaver
Benjamin Bolker
Bill McMillin
Brian Moore
Casey Youngflesh
Christoph Junghans
Christopher Erdmann
DSTraining
Dan Michael O. Heggø
David Jennings
Erin Alison Becker
Evan Williamson
Garrett Bachant
Grant Sayer
Ian Lee
Jake Lever
Jamene Brooks-Kieffer
James Baker
James E McClure
James O'Donnell
James Tocknell
Janoš Vidali
Jeffrey Oliver
Jeremy Teitelbaum
Jeyashree Krishnan
Joe Atzberger
Jonah Duckles
Jonathan Cooper
João Rodrigues
Katherine Koziar
Katrin Leinweber
Kunal Marwaha
Kurt Glaesemann
L.C. Karssen
Lauren Ko
Lex Nederbragt
Madicken Munk
Maneesha Sane
Marie-Helene Burle
Mark Woodbridge
Martino Sorbaro
Matt Critchlow
Matteo Ceschia
Matthew Bourque
Matthew Hartley
Maxim Belkin
Megan Potterbusch
Michael Torpey
Michael Zingale
Mingsheng Zhang
Nicola Soranzo
Nima Hejazi
Nora McGregor
Oscar Arbeláez
Peace Ossom Williamson
Raniere Silva
Rayna Harris
Rene Gassmoeller
Rich McCue
Richard Barnes
Ruud Steltenpool
Ryan Wick
Rémi Emonet
Samniqueka Halsey
Samuel Lelièvre
Sarah Stevens
Saskia Hiltemann
Schlauch, Tobias
Scott Bailey
Shari Laster
Simon Waldman
Stefan Siegert
Thea Atwood
Thomas Morrell
Tim Dennis
Tommy Keswick
Tracy Teal
Trevor Keller
TrevorLeeCline
Tyler Crawford Kelly
Tyler Reddy
Umihiko Hoshijima
Veronica Ikeshoji-Orlati
Wes Harrell
Will Usher
William Sacks
Wolmar Nyberg Åkerström
Yuri
abracarambar
ajtag
butterflyskip
cmjt
hdinkel
jonestoddcm
pllim
Date Added:
08/07/2020
Library Carpentry: OpenRefine
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
Rating
0.0 stars

Library Carpentry lesson: an introduction to OpenRefine for Librarians This Library Carpentry lesson introduces people working in library- and information-related roles to working with data in OpenRefine. At the conclusion of the lesson you will understand what the OpenRefine software does and how to use the OpenRefine software to work with data files.

Subject:
Applied Science
Information Science
Mathematics
Measurement and Data
Material Type:
Module
Provider:
The Carpentries
Author:
Alexander Mendes
Anna Neatrour
Antonin Delpeuch
Betty Rozum
Christina Koch
Christopher Erdmann
Daniel Bangert
Elizabeth Lisa McAulay
Evan Williamson
Jamene Brooks-Kieffer
James Baker
Jamie Jamison
Jeffrey Oliver
Katherine Koziar
Naupaka Zimmerman
Paul R. Pival
Rémi Emonet
Tim Dennis
Tom Honeyman
Tracy Teal
andreamcastillo
dnesdill
hauschke
mhidas
Date Added:
08/07/2020
Library Carpentry: The UNIX Shell
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
Rating
0.0 stars

Library Carpentry lesson to learn how to use the Shell. This Library Carpentry lesson introduces librarians to the Unix Shell. At the conclusion of the lesson you will: understand the basics of the Unix shell; understand why and how to use the command line; use shell commands to work with directories and files; use shell commands to find and manipulate data.

Subject:
Applied Science
Information Science
Mathematics
Measurement and Data
Material Type:
Module
Provider:
The Carpentries
Author:
Adam Huffman
Alex Kassil
Alex Mendes
Alexander Konovalov
Alexander Morley
Ana Costa Conrado
Andrew Reid
Andrew T. T. McRae
Ariel Rokem
Ashwin Srinath
Bagus Tris Atmaja
Belinda Weaver
Benjamin Bolker
Benjamin Gabriel
BertrandCaron
Brian Ballsun-Stanton
Christopher Erdmann
Christopher Mentzel
Colin Sauze
Dan Michael Heggø
Dave Bridges
David McKain
Dmytro Lituiev
Elena Denisenko
Eric Jankowski
Erin Alison Becker
Evan Williamson
Farah Shamma
Gabriel Devenyi
Gerard Capes
Giuseppe Profiti
Halle Burns
Hannah Burkhardt
Ian Lessing
Ian van der Linde
Jake Cowper Szamosi
James Baker
James Guelfi
Jarno Rantaharju
Jarosław Bryk
Jason Macklin
Jeffrey Oliver
John Pellman
Jonah Duckles
Jonny Williams
Katrin Leinweber
Kevin M. Buckley
Kunal Marwaha
Laurence
Marc Gouw
Marie-Helene Burle
Marisa Lim
Martha Robinson
Martin Feller
Megan Fritz
Michael Lascarides
Michael Zingale
Michele Hayslett
Mike Henry
Morgan Oneka
Murray Hoggett
Nicola Soranzo
Nicolas Barral
Noah D Brenowitz
Owen Kaluza
Patrick McCann
Peter Hoyt
Rafi Ullah
Raniere Silva
Ruud Steltenpool
Rémi Emonet
Stephan Schmeing
Stephen Jones
Stephen Leak
Stéphane Guillou
Susan J Miller
Thomas Mellan
Tim Dennis
Tom Dowrick
Travis Lilleberg
Victor Koppejan
Vikram Chhatre
Yee Mey
colinmorris
csqrs
earkpr
ekaterinailin
hugolio
jenniferleeucalgary
reshama shaikh
sjnair
Date Added:
08/07/2020
R for Reproducible Scientific Analysis
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
Rating
0.0 stars

This lesson in part of Software Carpentry workshop and teach novice programmers to write modular code and best practices for using R for data analysis. an introduction to R for non-programmers using gapminder data The goal of this lesson is to teach novice programmers to write modular code and best practices for using R for data analysis. R is commonly used in many scientific disciplines for statistical analysis and its array of third-party packages. We find that many scientists who come to Software Carpentry workshops use R and want to learn more. The emphasis of these materials is to give attendees a strong foundation in the fundamentals of R, and to teach best practices for scientific computing: breaking down analyses into modular units, task automation, and encapsulation. Note that this workshop will focus on teaching the fundamentals of the programming language R, and will not teach statistical analysis. The lesson contains more material than can be taught in a day. The instructor notes page has some suggested lesson plans suitable for a one or half day workshop. A variety of third party packages are used throughout this workshop. These are not necessarily the best, nor are they comprehensive, but they are packages we find useful, and have been chosen primarily for their usability.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Information Science
Mathematics
Measurement and Data
Material Type:
Module
Provider:
The Carpentries
Author:
Adam H. Sparks
Ahsan Ali Khoja
Amy Lee
Ana Costa Conrado
Andrew Boughton
Andrew Lonsdale
Andrew MacDonald
Andris Jankevics
Andy Teucher
Antonio Berlanga-Taylor
Ashwin Srinath
Ben Bolker
Bill Mills
Bret Beheim
Clare Sloggett
Daniel
Dave Bridges
David J. Harris
David Mawdsley
Dean Attali
Diego Rabatone Oliveira
Drew Tyre
Elise Morrison
Erin Alison Becker
Fernando Mayer
François Michonneau
Giulio Valentino Dalla Riva
Gordon McDonald
Greg Wilson
Harriet Dashnow
Ido Bar
Jaime Ashander
James Balamuta
James Mickley
Jamie McDevitt-Irwin
Jeffrey Arnold
Jeffrey Oliver
John Blischak
Jonah Duckles
Josh Quan
Julia Piaskowski
Kara Woo
Kate Hertweck
Katherine Koziar
Katrin Leinweber
Kellie Ottoboni
Kevin Weitemier
Kiana Ashley West
Kieran Samuk
Kunal Marwaha
Kyriakos Chatzidimitriou
Lachlan Deer
Lex Nederbragt
Liz Ing-Simmons
Lucy Chang
Luke W Johnston
Luke Zappia
Marc Sze
Marie-Helene Burle
Marieke Frassl
Mark Dunning
Martin John Hadley
Mary Donovan
Matt Clark
Melissa Kardish
Mike Jackson
Murray Cadzow
Narayanan Raghupathy
Naupaka Zimmerman
Nelly Sélem
Nicholas Lesniak
Nicholas Potter
Nima Hejazi
Nora Mitchell
Olivia Rata Burge
Paula Andrea Martinez
Pete Bachant
Phil Bouchet
Philipp Boersch-Supan
Piotr Banaszkiewicz
Raniere Silva
Rayna Michelle Harris
Remi Daigle
Research Bazaar
Richard Barnes
Robert Bagchi
Rémi Emonet
Sam Penrose
Sandra Brosda
Sarah Munro
Sasha Lavrentovich
Scott Allen Funkhouser
Scott Ritchie
Sebastien Renaut
Thea Van Rossum
Timothy Eoin Moore
Timothy Rice
Tobin Magle
Trevor Bekolay
Tyler Crawford Kelly
Vicken Hillis
Yuka Takemon
bippuspm
butterflyskip
waiteb5
Date Added:
03/20/2017
The Unix Shell
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
Rating
0.0 stars

Software Carpentry lesson on how to use the shell to navigate the filesystem and write simple loops and scripts. The Unix shell has been around longer than most of its users have been alive. It has survived so long because it’s a power tool that allows people to do complex things with just a few keystrokes. More importantly, it helps them combine existing programs in new ways and automate repetitive tasks so they aren’t typing the same things over and over again. Use of the shell is fundamental to using a wide range of other powerful tools and computing resources (including “high-performance computing” supercomputers). These lessons will start you on a path towards using these resources effectively.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Mathematics
Measurement and Data
Material Type:
Module
Provider:
The Carpentries
Author:
Adam Huffman
Adam James Orr
Adam Richie-Halford
AidaMirsalehi
Alex Kassil
Alex Mac
Alexander Konovalov
Alexander Morley
Alix Keener
Amy Brown
Andrea Bedini
Andrew Boughton
Andrew Reid
Andrew T. T. McRae
Andrew Walker
Ariel Rokem
Armin Sobhani
Ashwin Srinath
Bagus Tris Atmaja
Bartosz Telenczuk
Ben Bolker
Benjamin Gabriel
Bertie Seyffert
Bill Mills
Brian Ballsun-Stanton
BrianBill
Camille Marini
Chris Mentzel
Christina Koch
Colin Morris
Colin Sauze
Damien Irving
Dan Jones
Dana Brunson
Daniel Baird
Daniel McCloy
Daniel Standage
Danielle M. Nielsen
Dave Bridges
David Eyers
David McKain
David Vollmer
Dean Attali
Devinsuit
Dmytro Lituiev
Donny Winston
Doug Latornell
Dustin Lang
Elena Denisenko
Emily Dolson
Emily Jane McTavish
Eric Jankowski
Erin Alison Becker
Ethan P White
Evgenij Belikov
Farah Shamma
Fatma Deniz
Filipe Fernandes
Francis Gacenga
François Michonneau
Gabriel A. Devenyi
Gerard Capes
Giuseppe Profiti
Greg Wilson
Halle Burns
Hannah Burkhardt
Harriet Alexander
Hugues Fontenelle
Ian van der Linde
Inigo Aldazabal Mensa
Jackie Milhans
Jake Cowper Szamosi
James Guelfi
Jan T. Kim
Jarek Bryk
Jarno Rantaharju
Jason Macklin
Jay van Schyndel
Jens vdL
John Blischak
John Pellman
John Simpson
Jonah Duckles
Jonny Williams
Joshua Madin
Kai Blin
Kathy Chung
Katrin Leinweber
Kevin M. Buckley
Kirill Palamartchouk
Klemens Noga
Kristopher Keipert
Kunal Marwaha
Laurence
Lee Zamparo
Lex Nederbragt
M Carlise
Mahdi Sadjadi
Marc Rajeev Gouw
Marcel Stimberg
Maria Doyle
Marie-Helene Burle
Marisa Lim
Mark Mandel
Martha Robinson
Martin Feller
Matthew Gidden
Matthew Peterson
Megan Fritz
Michael Zingale
Mike Henry
Mike Jackson
Morgan Oneka
Murray Hoggett
Nicola Soranzo
Nicolas Barral
Noah D Brenowitz
Noam Ross
Norman Gray
Orion Buske
Owen Kaluza
Patrick McCann
Paul Gardner
Pauline Barmby
Peter R. Hoyt
Peter Steinbach
Philip Lijnzaad
Phillip Doehle
Piotr Banaszkiewicz
Rafi Ullah
Raniere Silva
Robert A Beagrie
Ruud Steltenpool
Ry4an Brase
Rémi Emonet
Sarah Mount
Sarah Simpkin
Scott Ritchie
Stephan Schmeing
Stephen Jones
Stephen Turner
Steve Leak
Stéphane Guillou
Susan Miller
Thomas Mellan
Tim Keighley
Tobin Magle
Tom Dowrick
Trevor Bekolay
Varda F. Hagh
Victor Koppejan
Vikram Chhatre
Yee Mey
csqrs
earkpr
ekaterinailin
nther
reshama shaikh
s-boardman
sjnair
Date Added:
03/20/2017
Version Control with Git
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
Rating
0.0 stars

This lesson is part of the Software Carpentry workshops that teach how to use version control with Git. Wolfman and Dracula have been hired by Universal Missions (a space services spinoff from Euphoric State University) to investigate if it is possible to send their next planetary lander to Mars. They want to be able to work on the plans at the same time, but they have run into problems doing this in the past. If they take turns, each one will spend a lot of time waiting for the other to finish, but if they work on their own copies and email changes back and forth things will be lost, overwritten, or duplicated. A colleague suggests using version control to manage their work. Version control is better than mailing files back and forth: Nothing that is committed to version control is ever lost, unless you work really, really hard at it. Since all old versions of files are saved, it’s always possible to go back in time to see exactly who wrote what on a particular day, or what version of a program was used to generate a particular set of results. As we have this record of who made what changes when, we know who to ask if we have questions later on, and, if needed, revert to a previous version, much like the “undo” feature in an editor. When several people collaborate in the same project, it’s possible to accidentally overlook or overwrite someone’s changes. The version control system automatically notifies users whenever there’s a conflict between one person’s work and another’s. Teams are not the only ones to benefit from version control: lone researchers can benefit immensely. Keeping a record of what was changed, when, and why is extremely useful for all researchers if they ever need to come back to the project later on (e.g., a year later, when memory has faded). Version control is the lab notebook of the digital world: it’s what professionals use to keep track of what they’ve done and to collaborate with other people. Every large software development project relies on it, and most programmers use it for their small jobs as well. And it isn’t just for software: books, papers, small data sets, and anything that changes over time or needs to be shared can and should be stored in a version control system.

Subject:
Applied Science
Computer Science
Information Science
Mathematics
Measurement and Data
Material Type:
Module
Provider:
The Carpentries
Author:
Alexander G. Zimmerman
Amiya Maji
Amy L Olex
Andrew Lonsdale
Annika Rockenberger
Begüm D. Topçuoğlu
Ben Bolker
Bill Sacks
Brian Moore
Casey Youngflesh
Charlotte Moragh Jones-Todd
Christoph Junghans
David Jennings
Erin Alison Becker
François Michonneau
Garrett Bachant
Grant Sayer
Holger Dinkel
Ian Lee
Jake Lever
James E McClure
James Tocknell
Janoš Vidali
Jeremy Teitelbaum
Jeyashree Krishnan
Jimmy O'Donnell
Joe Atzberger
Jonah Duckles
Jonathan Cooper
João Rodrigues
Katherine Koziar
Katrin Leinweber
Kunal Marwaha
Kurt Glaesemann
L.C. Karssen
Lauren Ko
Lex Nederbragt
Madicken Munk
Maneesha Sane
Marie-Helene Burle
Mark Woodbridge
Martino Sorbaro
Matt Critchlow
Matteo Ceschia
Matthew Bourque
Matthew Hartley
Maxim Belkin
Megan Potterbusch
Michael Torpey
Michael Zingale
Mingsheng Zhang
Nicola Soranzo
Nima Hejazi
Oscar Arbeláez
Peace Ossom Williamson
Pey Lian Lim
Raniere Silva
Rayna Michelle Harris
Rene Gassmoeller
Rich McCue
Richard Barnes
Ruud Steltenpool
Rémi Emonet
Samniqueka Halsey
Samuel Lelièvre
Sarah Stevens
Saskia Hiltemann
Schlauch, Tobias
Scott Bailey
Simon Waldman
Stefan Siegert
Thomas Morrell
Tommy Keswick
Traci P
Tracy Teal
Trevor Keller
TrevorLeeCline
Tyler Crawford Kelly
Tyler Reddy
Umihiko Hoshijima
Veronica Ikeshoji-Orlati
Wes Harrell
Will Usher
Wolmar Nyberg Åkerström
abracarambar
butterflyskip
jonestoddcm
Date Added:
03/20/2017