<p>Daylight, an immersive iPad app dedicated to art photography, has been a decade in the making. The company's founder Taj Forer and Michael Itkoff first built a bi-annual magazine about 10 years ago dedicated to documentary photography.</p><p>"It was meant to bridge the gap between the more conceptual concerns of fine art and artists, and then the more sociopolitical concerns of documentary photographers," he said. "In between those, we saw a growing niche for a kind of art photography that never had a platform before."</p><p>Daylight grew into a respectable brand within the art world and attracted photographers who had been published in The New York Times, Vice and Wired among other places. But it became clear that tablets held the potential to be the next destination for consumers to experience art.</p><p>So Forer is shifting into digital with the release of Daylight's first iOS edition today. "We live and we breathe tech," Forer said. "We recognized a massive opportunity to connect mainstream audiences with high art content."</p><p><a href="http://techcrunch.com/2014/03/05/daylight-reinvents-the-experience-of-art-photography-on-the-ipad/">Keep reading...</a></p>