Calzone
Gear Whore #1
- Local time
- 12:35 PM
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2008
- Messages
- 16,872
- Location
- The Gateway To The Hudson Highlands
There are other parallels from the 1920s to the present. First, the decade began with a very sharp, nasty recession (almost a depression) that didn't lift for a few years. Some industries, such as agriculture, never really recovered in proportion to the rest of the country. Second, underinvestment in national infrastructure began to show its limitations, such as the lack of flood control measures leading to the preventable devastation of the Mississippi flood of 1927. Third is rapid technological changes, most notably in automobiles and communications. The auto industry was exploding, creating the modern car commuter suburbs, car travel vacations, paved ("improved") roads, etc. The auto industry also was beginning to consolidate, with 1925 as the last year the independents (not Ford-GM-Chrysler) in aggregate made money. Communications were undergoing rapid changes as well, with the widespread adoption of radio, sound movies and electronic recording. There was a counter-reaction of rapid change in the form of racism and nationalism: membership in the KKK peaked in 1925, the immigration act of 1924 effectively shut down almost all immigration from southern and eastern Europe, and the nation turned its back on world affairs (expect where there was a direct economic interest of US companies.) Urbanization continued to expand (in the 1920 census the urban population exceeded rural for the first time) and with it the material demands for urban life (such as appliances) purchased largely on a vast expansion of credit (called "buying on time" in that era.) Product distribution also changed with the growth of chain stores, which had vastly greater buying power than local merchants. Sears opened its first retail store in 1925, and within a decade sold more merchandise at retail than mail order. Business consolidations increased, in spite of anti-trust concerns. By the end of the decade the economy had grown, and most had recovered from the recession ten years earlier, but it was a fragile recovery, uneven, untenable, and artificially buoyed by a loose money policy at the Fed.
Jim,
Thanks for the added history and parallels.
Sadly we live in interesting times.
What I takeaway from all this is a certain amount of personal responsibility and creation of self reliance because of the failure of governments and a failed economy.
In a sense I was highly mobile, accumulated wealth to build security, and am now building a bunker/heaven of sorts that will become a safe sustainable space for me and "Maggie."
Meanwhile the world around me is a pretty complete mess that is fraught with chaos and turmoil.
Having a back-backyard (40x100 second building lot) means I can grow enough food if I have to. My baby-victorian is really a small (tiny) house with less than 1500 square feet of living space. Consider that it is 4 bedroom with two full baths you have to know that all the rooms are smallish (tiny).
It bothers me seeing all the people left behind, the hunger, and the suffering of others.
On Halloween I discovered this brownstone on Lexington Avenue below 96th Street that used PVC pipe as a chute to deliver candy to kids trick or treating. The second floor stoop landing was utilized to keep social distancing from the sidewalk in a mighty clever manner.
I went back to document this brownstone after shooting some promotion for Maggie. On the way I met this kinda scary black biker I had engaged with in the past, but this time I got to know him. His name is "Hollywood" and he is a professional body guard. I got a few shots of him. Like I said a scary guy. Hollywood is the kinda guy who could squeeze of my head like a pimple.
Then I ran into this tall black woman who was elaborately dressed as "The Queen of Hearts." To be honest even though she was with her perhaps 5-6 year old daughter, she was smoking hot. So I started shooting her and her daughter as a family and then concentrated on this sexy woman in costume.
I was shooting my SL2 with the APO 35 Cron wide open at F2.0. At this setting the lens seems to be the sharpest, and along with this is an isolation of subject from background that displays mucho smoothness.
So in the last shot that was nearly a full head to toe vertical shot, when I zoomed in on her face while chimping the SL2 it was only then did I take notice of a scar that started from her left eye that curved like a stream as if eroded by a tear.
What a compelling and interesting photograph. Even though disfigured, she was still a beautiful woman. Something about her expression spoke of dignity.
On top of this is a compelling expression that somehow captures the sadness, the tragedy , and the history that is occurring.
I feel I only was able to capture the moment because the speed of the SL2 and autofocus. The APO 35 Cron is mucho speedy.
Cal