Re: post your Architecture photographs!
Austin,
Have you ever been hassled by security when taking photos like this? Last time I was on top of a parking garage downtown taking LF photos a security cop gave me a bad time for a while.
I always enjoy a new perspective on my hometown. What focal length lens was this?
Jonathan
Re: post your Architecture photographs!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jcoldslabs
Austin,
Have you ever been hassled by security when taking photos like this? Last time I was on top of a parking garage downtown taking LF photos a security cop gave me a bad time for a while.
I always enjoy a new perspective on my hometown. What focal length lens was this?
Jonathan
It feels like I'm always hassled by security wherever I go, but strangely, on this day I was completely left alone. As for focal length, it was a standard 250 on 5x7, but this is a very severe crop (it was originally vertical to give you an idea of how severe). I've found that's one nice thing about 5x7; it allows for some pretty drastic crops without too much loss of quality.
Kind of off topic, but I've been reading this book on Portland architecture (by Bart King) and it's making me look at our city with fresh eyes. I recommend it if you're interested in that sort of thing.
Re: post your Architecture photographs!
I'll look for the book. That sort of thing DOES interest me!
And I crop my 4x5s like mad, too, so I understand. If I know I need to crop severely I'll use a roll film back at times. One of the things I like about shooting Polaroid negatives is that, since I like the goopy edges, I really have to crop carefully in camera or lose the border. It forces me to frame differently than with standard film. Sadly my final reserves of type 55 and type 51 are running low.
Jonathan
Re: post your Architecture photographs!
Re: post your Architecture photographs!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
austin granger
It feels like I'm always hassled by security wherever I go, but strangely, on this day I was completely left alone. . .
Just wondering - where do you typically go? CIA headquarters? In about 30 years of photography (including a couple days in Portland) I've never been hassled and haven't even been spoken to by any security type except once, many years ago, when a bank security guard told me to not set up my camera and tripod on the bank's property.
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Re: post your Architecture photographs!
Hindu Temple
Elgin, IL
Fortepan 200 in Pyrocat HD
Ilford MGIV toned in selenium
Attachment 73212
Re: post your Architecture photographs!
dlin... Nice high-key shot.
Re: post your Architecture photographs!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Brian Ellis
Just wondering - where do you typically go? CIA headquarters? In about 30 years of photography (including a couple days in Portland) I've never been hassled and haven't even been spoken to by any security type except once, many years ago, when a bank security guard told me to not set up my camera and tripod on the bank's property.
No CIA headquarters yet, just the usual stuff: malls, rail yards, parking structures, barns, condos, downtown office buildings, industrial sites, dams, cornfields (!), abandoned buildings of all sorts... Maybe I'm just a suspicious looking character. :) In fairness, most of the people who've told me I can't photograph have been pretty friendly about it. As far as security guards, I think sometimes they're just bored, or curious about the camera. I've had some nice talks with security guards.
Re: post your Architecture photographs!
Pretty much the same story for me as for Austin. I get questioned but the cops or security people end up being wary but tolerant. However, a number of years ago (closer to 9/11, which is telling) some friends and I were photographing a railroad bridge from public space when we got seriously hassled by a guard who tried to take our names and threatened to call the cops. Very hardcore.
Jonathan
Re: post your Architecture photographs!
The Jug, Sandy Boulevard, Portland
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5271/7...3ba21bda_c.jpg
This building was originally a refreshment stand. The top was an orange, while the round insets below advertised Coca-Cola. Later on it was a pool hall; the orange became an eight ball, while the insets were other pool balls. In its current incarnation, The Jug serves as a strip club called Pirate's Cove.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/austingranger/