Your approach is a near picturing "not moving" as possible, me think. The trolleys are "behind bars" the light is kind of moody, and so on. One thing working against the "not moving" is the head lights at one of the trolleys. How about cloning them away?
That said. The picture does not tell the store alone. You have to have the context told to understand it. Tim Mostly harmless (just plain Norwegian) Never underestimate the power of stupidity in large crowds (Very freely after Arthur C. Clarke, or some other clever guy) > -----Original Message----- > From: Rick Womer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: 14. november 2005 19:30 > To: [email protected] > Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: PESO: Transit Strike > > A couple of weeks ago we had a transit strike here in > Philadelphia. On my route to work, there is a plaza > where five trolley (tram) lines converge, and go > underground for the last 5km to the center of the > city. I stopped on my way home and photographed the > strange scene of silent trolleys, left by their > drivers at 12:01 am, in a plaza closed off by > temporary cyclone fencing and devoid of the usual > crowd of passengers. > > http://www.photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=3878335 > > A companion photo has the trolleys in focus and the > fence out of focus, but I think I like this one > better. > > PZ-1p, FA24-90, Elite Chrome 100, exposure unrecorded. > > Comments invited. > > Rick > > > > __________________________________ > Start your day with Yahoo! - Make it your home page! > http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs >

