Le Journal de la Photographie
As seen through a fish-eye lens from an apartment four blocks away, smoke streams from the north tower within minutes of the first plane's attack.
Photograph by Patricia McDonough
As seen through a fish-eye lens from an apartment four blocks away, smoke streams from the north tower within minutes of the first plane's attack.
Photograph by Patricia McDonough

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Patricia McDonough
As seen through a fish-eye lens from an apartment four blocks away, smoke streams from the north tower within minutes of the first plane's attack.
Photograph by Patricia McDonough
Alex Webb
On a Brooklyn rooftop, shortly after the collapse of the twin towers, Jenna Piccirillo and three-month-old Vaughan embody innocence and resilience, according to the photographer: "Life continues in the face of disaster...despite the horrors we inflict on one another." Photograph © Alex Webb/Magnu...
Thomas Hoepker
After taking this picture on 9/11 in Brooklyn, the photographer found it upsettingly tranquil, and decided not to publish the image widely until four years after the attacks. Photograph © Thomas Hoepker/Magnum Photos
Jerry Spagnoli
An expert in nineteenth-century photographic techniques brought a wooden view camera and a daguerreotype plate to his Chelsea rooftop, making a three-second exposure as the south tower disappeared on the horizon.
Photograph by Jerry Spagnoli
Rob Howard
At Rector Street and Broadway, a photographer leaned out his window with a medium-format camera and caught the moment before the second plane's impact.
Photograph by Rob Howard
Patrick Witty
A knot of bystanders at Park Row and Beekman Street look up as the south tower begins to collapse.
Photograph by Patrick Witty