Abandoned City Hall Subway Station | New York City

Awhile back, John-Paul Palescandolo, one of this site’s contributors went on a tour of some abandoned subway sections of New York City.  Becoming a member of New York Transit Museum is a great opportunity for those who have further interest in this area of history.

John-Paul ended up with a wonderful original capture of the main archway of the Old City Hall station stop, with all of the vibrantly-colored tilework, except for one problem – there was a wooden ramp in view, something that he had no control over.  Well, he did what any good photographer would do, which is try to get the best possible shot anyway.

Difficult lighting situation here – Canon EOS 5D using the Canon 24/1.4L @ ISO 400.  Image was captured hand-held at about 1/15 sec.
After the RAW processing, we come away with an image that is technically quite good.  Here you are:

Old City Hall Station

 

So, like usual, John Paul came to me and asked if I could make a print for him.  We discussed the difficulty of the original image capture and I congratulated him on his RAW processing rendition.  He kept telling me how annoyed he was about the wooden ramp being in the way.  Based on the location of the ramp in the image (intersects with many intricate background elements, and there are shadows a-plenty in this scene!), it would not be an easy task.  Most people think it is fairly easy to get rid of objects – sure it can be – but what do you put in place of what you are editing out? When you ‘clone stamp over it’ or ‘heal it away’ it doesn’t magically reveal what was beyond it.   This is serious and time-consuming stuff.

I told John Paul that I would attempt to remove the wooden ramp from the scene before I printed the image.  I just felt so bad about making an expensive print (he wanted it on the highest-end fiber based Hahnemuhle paper) that would not end up looking as fantastic as it absolutely could.  So, after a number of painstaking hours, I produced a version of which I am quite proud and that John Paul liked and certainly appreciated.

The print was made 11×14 and is framed, hanging somewhere in his home.

 

There has been quite the internet buzz surrounding this photo.  In November of 2010 both Yahoo News and The Huffington Post featured this photos in a news story about the abandoned subway station.

Additionally, the image has been licensed by The German Reader’s Digest (May 2011 issue), the German national newspaper, Die Ziet (December 2, 2010)  and Dwell (March 2011)  for print publication.

Fine Art prints in all sizes are available for purchase.  Please contact eric@kazarts.com for information on purchasing prints.

 

Old City Hall Station

Amaryllis | Flower Photography | Bridgewater NJ

Happy Holidays from Eric & Kerry here at Kaz Arts Photography & The Fine Art Photo!

Our indoor Amaryllis bloomed right in time for our Christmas holiday, just as it was supposed to.  The plant pictured here will bloom again in another couple of days and we have another Amaryllis bulb growing taller & taller each day.  Enjoy!

 

Species: Amaryllis
Variety: Apple Blossom

 

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Dahlia III | Flower Photography | Bridgewater NJ

Dahlia season is coming to an end with the frost quickly approaching.  After a long season of much flower production, you can see the last flower bud on this plant in the second image of today’s post.
There may be one or two other Dahlia plants that will still produce one more bloom or so before…the end.  We shall see!

 

 

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The Lytro: And What it Means for Photography

 

Here to stay?   Or Photography fad?

In case you didn’t hear about it last week, Lytro announced Spring 2012 availability of their breakthrough picture taking technology simply called, Lytro.   Lytro operates based on a light field engine which captures “light traveling in every direction through every point in space” (The Science Inside | Lytro).  What this means is that instead of just capturing light focused at a single distance plane (which is what a traditional camera lens does), Lytro can capture all vector direction and information of the rays of light visible in a scene.

What does this essentially allow for?  The result of a Lytro digital image capture  is called a “living picture”.  A living picture refers to the fact that the image is interactive in its ability to change magnification and focus after the photo has been taken.  This concept seems quite interesting. Try taking a look at some images in the Lytro picture gallery.  The technology is fascinating.  One has the ability to click on different parts of an image to render the focus wherever you want.  You can also zoom into different planes of the image and still adjust the focus as desired.

I’ve known about this research for quite some time now, and have had the opportunity to read the Stanford PhD dissertation written by Lytros CEO Ren Ng.  While I am not prepared to comment on the science of light ray theory, there are serious questions of technical photographic issues pertaining to the Lytro as well as the philosophical implications this technology has for photography as we have known it since the early 1800s…

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Nasturtium | Flower Photography | Bridgewater NJ

 

These guys just keep on blooming.   They will probably keep on blooming until the season’s first frost hits us this coming weekend.

Looks like the growing season will finally be coming to an end.  We’ve been quite fortunate this year to not get our first frost until the tail-end of October.

Pretty soon it will be time to take the show indoors!

 

Nasturtium

Nasturtium II

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