Tom

Frank is dealing with a Liberal's, criminals have rights, type of local government.
No money for Frank, from Mayor Dave.:-)

The idea is fantastic Frank.

Dave

Quoting graywolf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

An interesting and worthwhile series. Documenting the old edifices before they vanish completely is to my mind worth the effort. So often they fade away without anyone noticing.

Your local historical society may even be interested in prints. While they seldom have the money to pay for such things they will sometimes reimburse one for film and processing. The TLR is a great camera for such projects.

graywolf
http://www.graywolfphoto.com
http://webpages.charter.net/graywolf
"Idiot Proof" <==> "Expert Proof"
-----------------------------------


frank theriault wrote:
http://www.photo.net/photodb/folder?folder_id=585048

When I was a kid growing up in the late 50's and early 60's, apartment
buildings had names.  Often in gold-leaf lettering on the main doors,
of as some sort of prominent signage on the front wall, it seemed that
every building had a name.

That trend seems to be over now, as new rental apartment buildings
seem to be decidedly lower class affairs, not worthy of going to all
the trouble of being named

Such nomenclature seems anachronistic and quaint to me now, as do the
names themselves:  "mansions" and "courts" abound in the older parts
of Toronto, and names such as "The Sussex", "The Avalon" and "The
Merlin" tell of headier days, when sophisitcated urbanites inhabited
these grand residences.

Most of them are crumbling now, their days of glory long since having past.

I've taken a few photos (never printed) with various 35mm cameras, but
back when my shoulder injury forced me to use my waist-level
viewfindered Yashicamat, it occured to me that doing a series of these
old places in 6x6 medium format, taken with a 50 year old camera might
be kind of interesting.

I've only taken about 2 rolls so far, and I'll be getting at least one
print per week done up.  These are my first two (but by all means they
may not make it into the final series - however big this series may
end up).

Any comments WRT these first two photos, and the idea for the series
generally, are appreciated.

cheers,
frank
--
"Sharpness is a bourgeois concept."  -Henri Cartier-Bresson







Equine Photography in York Region

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