Charles “Flip” Nicklin (born 1948) is a nature photographer best known for his underwater photographs of whales.
He has been called “one of the world’s leading whale photographers.”
Table of Contents
- 1 Early life
- 1.1 Face to Face with Whales: Level 5 (National Geographic Readers)
- 1.2 Face to Face with Whales (Face to Face with Animals)
- 1.3 iCanvas FLI7 Bottlenose Dolphin Pod, Hawaii Canvas Print by Flip Nicklin, 12" x 18" x 1.5" Depth Gallery Wrapped
- 1.4 Face to Face with Dolphins (Face to Face with Animals)
- 1.5 Humpbacks - Unveiling the Mysteries
- 1.6 Among Giants: A Life with Whales
- 1.7 iCanvas FLI12 Orca Group, Johnstone Strait, British Columbia, Canada Canvas Print by Flip Nicklin, 26" x 40" x 0.75" Depth Gallery Wrapped
- 1.8 Hawaii's Humpbacks: Unveiling the Mysteries
- 1.9 Vol. 193, No. 3, National Geographic Magazine, March 1998: Planet of the Beetles; Marine Sanctuaries; Naples Unabashed; The Rise of Life on Earth; America's First Highway; Nomads of the Arctic
- 1.10 iCanvas FLI11 Orca Group Surfacing, Johnstone Strait, British Columbia, Canada Canvas Print by Flip Nicklin, 18" x 26" x 0.75" Depth Gallery Wrapped
Early life
Nicklin’s father Chuck is an underwater cinematographer.
He taught Flip and his brother how to scuba dive at a young age—by age 14, he was an assistant dive instructor to his father and teaching others how to dive.
Nicklin’s family owned a dive shop near Pacific Beach, San Diego called the Diving Locker.
Last update 2021-08-06