Vince Lupo
Whatever
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Beautiful morning dirt!?
Rapids! This is the Gananoque River.Beautiful morning dirt!?
I saw this image the same way, initially. The bridge reads as a wall behind the foreground rapids, rather than over them, and the water reads as something solid like dirt. A bit of an illusion, and very enjoyable; I like being reminded that the camera doesn't always tell the truth.Beautiful morning dirt!?
Really interesting you guys say that. I just showed it to my wife and asked her what she was looking at. It took her a minute to figure it out as well. Likely because I was there I can’t see how you all see a wall and dirt - guess I must be smoking the wrong stuff 🙂I saw this image the same way, initially. The bridge reads as a wall behind the foreground rapids, rather than over them, and the water reads as something solid like dirt. A bit of an illusion, and very enjoyable; I like being reminded that the camera doesn't always tell the truth.
What's interesting, too, is that now, having studied the image several times, I find it almost impossible to see it as anything other than water flowing under a bridge. Of course, viewers coming to the image without any prior information will read the visual cues in the way they are most accustomed to do, which is very dependent on the conventional representational strategies of the medium. Perhaps unintentionally, you subverted those strategies.Really interesting you guys say that. I just showed it to my wife and asked her what she was looking at. It took her a minute to figure it out as well. Likely because I was there I can’t see how you all see a wall and dirt - guess I must be smoking the wrong stuff 🙂
Instantly I see it as water now, and like RG, I cannot now see it otherwise. But it took another 8 seconds even after being told it was a bridge to see what it is that you both were seeing. To me it’s the pitched roof that throws me off. And the high contrast. Up where you are I wouldn’t have figured on a building being so close to a bridge over rapids. Here’s an image for Stephen Shore revised edition of The Nature of Photographs.What's interesting, too, is that now, having studied the image several times, I find it almost impossible to see it as anything other than water flowing under a bridge. Of course, viewers coming to the image without any prior information will read the visual cues in the way they are most accustomed to do, which is very dependent on the conventional representational strategies of the medium. Perhaps unintentionally, you subverted those strategies.
But generally, when I see your images, I wish I could get my hands on whatever it is you're smoking. My photography would see a vast improvement! 😉
You’re right I did use an NC-2 finder which is a big help. I find that one works best with eyeglasses as long you remove the outer eyecup.It is amazing how much difference even a monopod makes when using 1/125s or 1/60s. Ernst Wildi extolled their benefit. The opening shot of this thread was taken no faster than these speeds with a monopod and the distant buildings look crisp except for the hazy atmosphere at the bend in the river. The other thing is missing focus with a waist level finder and the acute matte D screen. But the frost tree looks like you’d have needed a prism finder.