Photography competition: Selection #1
Following the launch of the Frank Hurley Photographer’s Jacket, a world-first collaboration with Leica Camera AG, Shackleton is hosting a photography competition to celebrate the cultures, wildlife...
Read moreWho financed Shackleton’s expeditions?
Ernest Shackleton’s adventures as a pioneering Antarctic explorer a century ago might never have happened without the crucial support of many rich businessmen or wealthy individuals, who bankrolle...
Read moreShackleton co-founder in Atlantic row
Ian Holdcroft, co-founder of Shackleton, heads into the Atlantic Ocean with The Felix Five to take part in the world’s toughest row. Here’s how to follow his progress.
Read moreKiliii Yuyan: Outside your cultural zone
Photojournalist and National Geographic contributor Kiliii Yuyan has spent years immersing himself in faraway cultures, offering a glimpse into a way of life most of us will never experience.
Read moreMartin Hartley Photography Exhibition
Photographer Martin Hartley showcases Taken To Extremes exhibition at the Shackleton Store in Mayfair, paying homage to the power of human compulsion; the same compulsion that drove early pioneers ...
Read moreShackleton x Leica: Frank Hurley Photographer's Jacket
Introducing the world's first expedition photographer's jacket. Designed to help photographers capture the extreme. A collaboration between Shackleton and Leica Camera AG.
Read moreUltra-travel: Into the unknown
Escape the hustle and bustle of everyday life and experience places that few people (if any) have ever been.
Read moreWomen living on the edge of earth
Photographer Alegra Ally lived in a small yurt on the Siberian tundra with a traditional Nenets family to document their life in one of the most extreme environments on earth.
Read moreAbove and beyond with Florian Ledoux
Florian Ledoux use drones to capture the most untouched regions on earth and, more importantly, highlight the need to protect them.
Read moreMartin Hartley: driven by responsibility
Martin Hartley’s introduction to the Arctic Ocean was brutal. Seventeen years later, he is preparing to head back yet again to undertake his most important assignment to date.
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