Wednesday, 30 June 2021
CITY DAILY PHOTO JULY THEME DAY - TOOLS
Tuesday, 29 June 2021
IDOLATRY
The very peak of the old building that houses the City Museum, perhaps 15 stories over the street. I suppose that's a praying mantis on top, perhaps beseeching the gods to find the Cardinals some pitchers who can throw strikes. You can reach the top of this dome by one of the museum's innumerable climbing tubes but there is also a ramp that comes up from the back.That's son Andy standing in the center, holding grandson Atlas. Daughter-in-law Claire is to Andy's left. No idea who that guy is waving at the worlld.
Monday, 28 June 2021
DOWN ON THE FARM
BETWEEN THE STORMS
Thunderstorms passed through the area off and on all weekend while the Michigan division of our family was here to visit. One evening Mrs. C and I watched the kids while our son and his wife went to dinner with an old friend. Another line of storms blew across, leaving this view from their Air BnB apartment when the sun returned.
Saturday, 26 June 2021
IDENTICAL COUSINS
Television viewers of a certain age (well, candidly, old Americans) may remember The Patty Duke show from the 60s. The premise was that the daughters of identical twin brothers were, well, identical cousins. https://youtu.be/qQTqKcojrVY MICrowe Audrey and MOCrowe Ellie aren't quite identical, although Audrey's mother bought them matching dresses. They are almost exactly two years apart in age but Ellie is only a little taller and they are the best of friends. They favor the same hairstyle. Here they are patiently waiting to board the Ferris wheel on the roof of the City Museum.
Friday, 25 June 2021
GIRLS JUST WANNA HAVE FUN
My son and his family live in central Michigan, a 10 hour drive from here with gas and kid breaks. We don't get to see them enough but they made the long trip down here this weekend. The postal abbreviation for Michigan is MI. It's MO for Missouri. Clever Andy refers to his division as MICrowes and ours as MOCrowes.
So we all went to the Magic House, STL's childrens' museum yesterday morning. OMG was it crowded. At some point part of the family made it to their Van der Graff generator. MICrowe Audrey, almost 6, had no fear. https://youtu.be/PIb6AZdTr-A Great phone cam shot by daughter Emily.
The first time we saw a Van der Graff generator was at the Deutches Muzeum in Munich, at least 30 years ago. We expect to be there in September but, with the passage of time, I don't have enough hair to be worth a try.
Thursday, 24 June 2021
SLOW PROGRESS
This patio is a few steps away from Nature Playscape we've seen lately. It's at the back of a hilltop pavillion that's been preserved from the 1904 World's Fair. (We also had the Olympics that year. We used to be somebody.) The turtle hasn't made any progress that I've noticed. It was designed by Bob Cassilly, the late mad genius who founded our wacky City Museum. We are taking the grandkids there Saturday and there should be plenty of images.
Wednesday, 23 June 2021
MORE EASILY VISIBLE, SORT OF
The infrared pictures I've been posting look strange, but I suppose that's the point. I decided to drop back into the visible spectrum in the same venue. I wouldn't stick my nose this close to a bee, even though this one is tiny, but I'm not so worried using my lens.
We will be back to more typical material soon. Our Michigan grandchildren, whom we see all too seldom, will be in town for a few days, and we're doing the grand tour of St. Lou kid stuff.
Tuesday, 22 June 2021
LOOKS LIKE WINTER
Another infrared image from the Nature Playscape in Forest Park. Someone on a Facebook group I belong to said this looks like a winter late afternoon after snow has cleared. Well, that's dumb luck. I usually don't go for pretty but this has its charms.
Monday, 21 June 2021
BUG'S EYE VIEW
There is a new, or at least repurposed, area in Forest park called Nature Playscape, https://www.forestparkforever.org/playscape. Its web page says that it is an
experiential play space with natural landscapes . . . featuring distinct activity areas, include[ing] sand play areas, willow tunnels, stump steppers, boulders and rocks, hand water pumps and much more. The goal: Encourage visitors — especially kids — to connect with nature as they engage their senses as they explore, discover and learn.
I took Ellie there a couple of weeks ago and she was bored. We think it's not so great as a children's play area but a beautiful place for adults to wander in a carefully curated recreation of Midwestern meadows and woods. Parts of it deserve close visual attention.
Another infrared shot obviously.
Sunday, 20 June 2021
ALIEN RETINA
A little exercise you sometimes see in books about the nature of consciousness poses the question "what is it like to be a bat?" Your vision is weak and you navigate through space with a version of sonar, using systems alien to humans. There are lots of animals that see and hear wavelengths we cannot. Infrared photography offers a peak behind the curtain and teaches us about the limits of our perception.
Saturday, 19 June 2021
THE SEEN AND THE UNSEEN
The only time I've ever been to Greece we visited an Orthodox church. If I remember correctly, there was a screen or wall across the area that Catholics call the sanctuary. There were things present and things that happened both in front and behind, a religious metaphor for the spiritual seen and unseen. I thought it was very poetic.
Infrared photography is kind of like that. The shapes, sizes and perspective are what we know in everyday life. However, the light itself is something we literally can't see but is absolutely there. I don't know how the camera records it as something our eyes can register but it's real. Makes me feel a little like an Orthodox priest.
Friday, 18 June 2021
IT'S NOT EVEN SUMMER YET
Summer doesn't officially start until tomorrow, June 20, but much of the U.S. is under a dome of high-pressure, hot air that has us cooking. This photo was taken downtown yesterday afternoon. 100 F is about 38 C. I think it was 119 F / 48 C in Phoenix on Thursday. Most - but not al - of us have air conditioning, but then think of our substantial homeless population. There are cooling shelters here but it's not unusual to hear of low income elderly people dying in their roasting apartments.
I'm sure we will revisit this in a month. Maybe less.
Thursday, 17 June 2021
WORTH THE WAIT
On a normal summer evening the crowd in front of Ted Drewes' frozen custard stand can be so thick that you might have to walk out in the street to get past. In pandemic times, there is a system of railings behind the far side of the building to keep the crowd orderly and spaced. People are sent up to the service window individually or in family groups. St. Louisans know any wait is worth it.
Wednesday, 16 June 2021
THURSDAY ARCH SERIES
Tuesday, 15 June 2021
NIGHT LIFE ON THE STREET
A typical summer night in The Lou, hanging out in the parking lot at Ted Drew's (if you can find a space). Families, teens and a few odd photographers hanging around. I don't know why the blue car left its lights on but it makes for a better picture.
Monday, 14 June 2021
LOCAL INSTITUTION
Everybody in this town knows Ted Drewes frozen custard stand, https://teddrewes.com/. It has been serving taste heaven for 80 years (and selling Christmas trees in December for 50). The signature treat is called a concrete because if you turn the cup upside down the custard won't fall out (subject to melting on a hot day). It's available in a boggling variety of flavors. I like peach.
This picture was taken late on a weeknight so it's not too crowded. But for the virus crowd control fencing, at mid-evening in the heat of summer the crowd can be spilling out onto Chippewa Street despite the cars speeding by.
Sunday, 13 June 2021
NO NEED TO FIX THIS SKY
Pretty much the same view as yesterday but now at blue hour with a few bright city colors. The Wheel is covered with LEDs that constantly change. Still some sunset orange reflected in well-aimed windows.
Saturday, 12 June 2021
THAT WHEEL, ETC.
One of our City Daily Photo colleagues commented yesterday that it seems mandatory for cities to have a Ferris wheel these days, and it's nice to have one here. It is build on the side of Union Station, now a hotel and entertainment complex. There is an aquarium, a mirror maze, mini golf and more. Expensive but fun. But two things to note about this scene:
Something in this image is totally fake and it would take a Photoshop nerd to spot it. The newest version of the program has a tool called Replace Sky. It precisely finds the edges of everything in front of the sky and drops in a new background of your choice. These clouds weren't there. The actual sky was empty (see yesterday's post).
The tall building just right of center is vacant and has no immediate prospect of reuse. After the breakup of the old AT&T into the regional "Baby Bells," STL was the home of Southwestern Bell. It bought up some of the other regional carriers and then acquired the rights to the AT&T name. This building was, for a time, AT&T's world headquarters. Then they decided that St. Louis was Podunk and moved the operation to Dallas. I read that it is hard to repurpose a large building built for a single tenant so it just sits there.
Friday, 11 June 2021
IT MAY NOT BE MUCH BUT IT'S OURS
I recently had an opportunity to join a group of photographers who had access to the rooftop of a multi-level garage. It had an unobstructed view of downtown, perhaps two or three miles away. We met before sunset. I brought my full frame DSLR, my longest telephoto and fired away.
We are a middle size city in the middle of the country, not much of a destination outside the region. We have our jewels. (And our horrors, but what city doesn't.) I have worked downtown for almost 47 years, although those days may be numbered. It has changed a lot, in some ways better, in some ways worse. The Ferris wheel in the lower left is a nice touch.
There are more infrared images I'll get back to some time.
Thursday, 10 June 2021
INTO THE BACKGROUND
The Arch was right out in front in yesterday's picture. Today it slides into the background behind downtown buildings, notably the architecturally wacky Civil Courts Building, described in an early post on this blog. For the locals, the view is east on Chestnut from about 14th Street. I got a little subtle color out of this infrared shot. So much more to learn.
Wednesday, 9 June 2021
RETURN OF THE THURSDAY ARCH SERIES
Haven't had the big wicket up in a while. My experiments with infrared photography brought about this somber rendering with an enigmatic sign. Quo vadis?
When I first started trying this I was getting some interesting color effects and it didnt work with the last batch of shots. I think you have to set a custom white balance for every scene. Not that hard to do on a Fujifilm camera but something else to remember.
Tuesday, 8 June 2021
GOOD OR BAD
More fun with infrared: a defunct night club on the edge of downtown. There is still so much to learn about this.
Monday, 7 June 2021
TUMBLE
Our town has a wonderful organization called Circus Harmony, https://circusharmony.org/, which takes young people from every part of the community and trains them in circus acrobatic arts. Part of it is for physical development and education, but an important part is to mix kids from every part of St. Louis in cooperative, harmonious efforts. They have traveled and performed internationally.
The public can watch them work out and attend smaller performances at their headquarters in the City Museum. The group is always part of Circus Flora. They moved so fast I was lucky to get a clear shot.
Sunday, 6 June 2021
THE LADY IN RED
Circus Flora's performance this weekend was a scaled-down, late pandemic affair. There were no full trapeze acts like I saw the last time I took my granddaughter. A swing had to suffice but I could not have imagined how beautifully someone could dance on a bar in the air.