I've always admired the beautiful clothing at Montgomery Boutique in Harlem (her pieces are all one-of-a-kind) . . . and the store design. I've been fascinated by the butterflies, flowers, etc., that hang from the ceiling. It's gorgeous.
*photo by Design Sponge.
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Montgomery Boutique in Harlem
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Odd Sangesland
I had the pleasure of meeting Odd Sangesland today - minutes after he completed this year's NYC Triathlon. The Triathlon's oldest participant, at a young 80, Mr. Sangesland looked like it was just another day in the park.
Monday, July 20, 2009
New Project: Old Cameras
Recently I was bemoaning my lack of space (tiny apartment, two dogs, one cat, one baby and one husband) when my mother noted that I have an immense array of old cameras on "display." She wondered why I didn't put those into storage along with my winter coats and various other items (like an ancient typewriter) that I have no room for but can't, for the life of me, part with. I was, of course, horrified. Why, I use all of those cameras, ALL OF THE TIME. My mother raised an eyebrow, "Really?" OK, so, no, I rarely, if ever, use any of them.
So, I have decided to embark upon a new project - I am going to use each and every one of these cameras and write about the results here.
First up: the Mamiya 645. I used this when I first purchased it, maybe twice. I was actually looking for a medium format that produced square images. The Mamiya is medium format that produces 6x7 cm images. At the time, I found the Mamiya heavy and intimidating (I ran around with my trusty and extremely light Pentax K1000 - which I used professionally and probably would have continued to do so if I hadn't started doing sports photography which required the switch to digital). Since I took it up again, however, I am loving the detailed images it produces and the fact that it's all manual. I recently developed the second roll I shot with it from possibly 9-10 years ago. Great details, great lighting (oh, how I love film). I shot a new roll of the bambino but found the manual focusing a bit tough (I'm out of practice) when you are trying to capture your delightful, yet squirmy, wee one. Two examples:
Next up: The Polaroid Automatic Land Camera 100. I'll be hunting down the 4.5 v battery and some Polaroid 600 film (and Fuji 100). The camera that I am most coveting right now? The Polaroid 600SE. It's a beauty.