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        <pubDate>Mon, 20 Sep 2004 14:30:00 GMT</pubDate>
        <title>NYC and Photography</title>
        <link>http://www.wdlabs.com/twilight/entry/20040920.1030</link>
        <description>I was down in the city again yesterday, specifically to photograph the reflections in buildings using my 100mm macro lens.  I wanted to isolate small areas where two textures intersected, as my most successful photograph from Color1 was of this genre and I wanted to explore that further.  (I will most likely eventually post the photograph, but I am still deciding in what form to present it and the pictures which go with it).
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One of the neat things about NYC (for me at least) is that I often run into professional photographers working.  I think it is natural for photographers at every level to check out what equipment others in the field are using.  As described in &lt;I&gt;Shutterbabe&lt;/I&gt; (see last entry) there is a sort of pecking order.  Pros use Nikon or Leica, locals use Minolta or Olympus.  (What does that make me?  I use both Nikon and Minolta equipment, not to mention the TLR Rollieflex).
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In Grand Central Terminal I saw a photographer with a medium format camera (not a Hasselblad, but nothing to be scoffed at either) photographing a pair of models dressed as you might see in a fashion magazine (next month, you probably will see them).  With all the noise and the hub-ub, I probably would not have noticed them at all, since the photographer was up on a different level than the models and shooting down on them, except that the photographer was setting her camera exactly where I had planned to set my camera to do one of those highly cliché pictures of GCT in black and white with some people blurred and some not due to a long exposure.  I can't remember what kind of camera she had, but it got me to thinking (again) that I really would like to have my own medium format camera.  I want a Hasselbald though, since that is what I learned with in my lighting class and the glass the lenses are to die for.  Can't afford it though.
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Then as I was out doing the real work I had set out to do (down in south Manhattan) I passed someone with a Leica.  Leica make these really high quality 35mm range finder cameras with incredible optics.  I wouldn't mind having one of those either.  Can't afford that either though.
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The coolest spotting ever was one day I was going to see the Concord with a friend of mine, and we passed by Jesus Christ being photographed by a photographer with a large format view camera.  Forget about Jesus for a minute though, that view camera was cool.  It's so big and bulky that you carry it around with a large tripod attached because you really can't use it without one it is so big and heavy.  I had seen a view camera once before, but not one this big.  It probably exposed 8x10 negatives.  That's 8 &lt;B&gt;inches&lt;/B&gt; by 10 &lt;B&gt;inches&lt;/B&gt;.  You could easily blow up a neg or slide that size to cover the side of a small building without noticing any grain.  Can not even come close to affording that one.  Guess you have to choose your economic battles.
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About a month later I was looking thorough one of those tasteless men's fashion magazines (which I do sometimes to critique the photographs) and right there was Jesus Christ walking through Manhattan.  One of the shots was at the very same location we had seen him at too.</description>
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