Luminous Landscape Forum
The Art of Photography => Street Showcase => Topic started by: Cornfield on January 08, 2019, 10:36:32 am
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Don't know how I managed to get this with so few people in it.
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I love the scene. But I have to say I wish there were more people in it.
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The place looks a bit deserted but I like it a lot. The quality of the light is excellent.
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Puts me in mind of a square we frequent in Venice, but without the people.
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Thanks for the comments. I should have said it is Venice but not a typlical shot.
I shoot stock virtually full time and this is an image that will sell well.
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Thanks for the comments. I should have said it is Venice but not a typlical shot.
I shoot stock virtually full time and this is an image that will sell well.
I know the square well. Just avoid that osteria on the far right, like you would the plague: crooks.
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I know the square well. Just avoid that osteria on the far right, like you would the plague: crooks.
Keith, it's in Venice... you should be going to Harry's Bar looking for the spirits of the late Michael (Winner) - or AA Gill.
;-)
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Keith, it's in Venice... you should be going to Harry's Bar looking for the spirits of the late Michael (Winner) - or AA Gill.
;-)
Together with Café Florian?
But in all honesty I've no interest in visiting the fashionable, obvious and extortionate.
;-)
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Together with Café Florian?
But in all honesty I've no interest in visiting the fashionable, obvious and extortionate.
;-)
For the experience, I'd rather spend some hours in the Café de Flore in Paris with the ghosts of my old favourites including Jeanloup Sieff!
Of those moments I enjoyed with Ann, sitting in an outdoor bar of the Carlton in Cannes, she with her Campari Soda in hand, and I with my G&T, watching a helicopter negotiate its business on a yacht in the bay was about as unreal as it gets. I asked the PR manager of that hotel if we could shoot some images on the property; he asked for which client, and when told it was for a beer company, he ever so nicely refused, saying the images would clash... ironically, however, we got our petty revenge by sitting out in the bay on a Riva, shooting our model and a can of the stuff with the entire hotel visible in the background.
That's partly what I meant with my pro and personal photography being the same buzz.
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She looks like she needs that beer to cool down.
;-)
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Keith, it's in Venice... you should be going to Harry's Bar looking for the spirits of the late Michael (Winner) - or AA Gill.
I'd have loved to have had a chance to meet Gill, a witty man and superb writer. Winner I think I have managed very well without.
Jeremy
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I'd have loved to have had a chance to meet Gill, a witty man and superb writer. Winner I think I have managed very well without.
Jeremy
I'd loved to have met him too, just not in Harry's.
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I'd have loved to have had a chance to meet Gill, a witty man and superb writer. Winner I think I have managed very well without.
Jeremy
I think I really took to the print persona of the "poor boy from Willesden"; whether his style with words and culture was a literary fabrication for press purposes or not is over my head to know, but his casual throwaways about Portofino etc. gave me much fun, as in his place I could envisage people I knew at the time. Gill was simply fascinating. In the years I read him, I never got the slightest hint as to the identity of the blonde.
Surprisingly, another Sunday Times stalwart whom I enjoyed was Jeremy Clarkson; funny in print, but a total bore (to me) on that car show for kids: Top Gear.
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She looks like she needs that beer to cool down.
;-)
Almost, but not quite: the cooling down need was the skipper's.
During that set, Ann was using the spray bottle to kep the T-shirt wet, and the skipper asked if he could do that. The model laughed her assent and so he managed to get himself a story for the grandkids. And I for LuLa. Who would have thought...
Rob
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I think I really took to the print persona of the "poor boy from Willesden"; whether his style with words and culture was a literary fabrication for press purposes or not is over my head to know, but his casual throwaways about Portofino etc. gave me much fun, as in his place I could envisage people I knew at the time. Gill was simply fascinating. In the years I read him, I never got the slightest hint as to the identity of the blonde.
Nicola Formby, I think.
Surprisingly, another Sunday Times stalwart whom I enjoyed was Jeremy Clarkson; funny in print, but a total bore (to me) on that car show for kids: Top Gear.
Oh, Rob, Top Gear wasn't a car show. It was a program in which three middle-aged overgrown schoolboys had fun, doing really silly things. But I agree with you about Clarkson's writing.
Jeremy
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Nicola Formby, I think.
Oh, Rob, Top Gear wasn't a car show. It was a program in which three middle-aged overgrown schoolboys had fun, doing really silly things. But I agree with you about Clarkson's writing.
Jeremy
And it developed quite a following among those other middle-aged chaps whomwould have liked to do those silly things themselves. A group, if I’m honest, in which I must include myself. ;)
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And it developed quite a following among those other middle-aged chaps who would have liked to do those silly things themselves. A group, if I’m honest, in which I must include myself. ;)
I'll join.
Jeremy