Cal, is that the same F3hp that I couldn't switch on, and load film into? I think I'm just not sophisticated enough to use Nikons.
Perhaps you should photograph the rich people on East 100th street. That would compliment the Davidson project nicely.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Christian,
Yep, it is the same F3 HP. It is a rather primitive camera by today's standards.
I would love to photograph some of the men that live down the block in the halfway house that formally was called "The Parole Transition Institute." I befriended one of the guys and I know him by first name. Also these men really loved my beloved dog that I had to muzzle. Beagle-Face was an aggressive 14-15 pound dog, and in the 13 months we had him before we had to put him down, if he didn't wear a muzzle he would of bit hundreds of people. Every day was fraught for this animal.
When I explained to these ex felons that he was abused, then abandoned, and that there already were two reported instances that the three strikes and your out rule would be inforced and he would be taken away and put down. Anyways for these men it seems we all had an understanding.
It seems everyone in my neighborhood knew my dog and he was truely famous, but it was understood that he was a hard core rescue case, and everyone in my hood was rooting for him.
Pretty much all the rich people in my neighborhood live in my building of 40 units which also includes a $1.8 million penthouse that was bought by some rich guy that is currently appears vacant and uninhabited.
My friend Tony tells me that East 101st Street use to be segrigated and that on one side of the street lived Italians and on the other Blacks. Street fighting happened on a block by block basis, and going uptown by oneself kinda insured getting beaten up. Then Latinos moved in...
Sunshine Park was created when a tenement fire spread to a few adjoining buildings and the buildings were later torn down. More or less this city park is used as a dog run and is filled with dog poop.
The site where my building was built use to be a vacant lot where some vagrant set up an automotive repair shanty. Then the land was developed and a Social Security office building was built, but that Social Security building was eventually closed and condemed due to a rat infestation that could not be mitigated. I imagine the auto repair shanty resembled something like the ones that existed in Willet's Point, but in Madhattan.
When I first rented my unit the building was rent stabilized. I felt rather lucky because having a two year old modern rent stabilized apartment in NYC is way beyond a miracle, especially in units that were built as luxury condos, but the rent stabilization got unwound when the building went condo.
My building was completed in 2008, one year after the housing bubble, and during that time the developers applied for a tax abatement, and that is how a luxury condo building became rent stabilized.
On Lexington Avenue between East 100th and East 101st the entire block had vacant storefronts save one. Today none are vacant and it has become a restaurant row of sorts.
Still I see news stories of muggings, attempted rapes, and even killings around the perimeter of a few blocks away. On East 101st Street is the Children's Aid Society, and I see the food lines from my apartment window.
On one block is a lot of history. Funny thing is that East Harlem is the fastest growing Asian community in NYC, due to cheap housing. When I first moved in there was a series of racial attacks against Asians right in my neighborhood where the beatings were rather savage and involved robbery. At one point on every block at every intersection up and down the avenues cop cars could be seen with their lights flashing to show a strong presence to quell the hate crimes.
They eventually caught the long time local who was responsible for basically beating up tiny Chinese immigrants. Lyn was really worried for a while because the reports of attacks were so frequent and so close.
So to annoy people I printed some really great bokeh shots. LOL. Interesting to see the rendering of the 50 Lux "E60" and Nikon 28/1.4 AF-D. Very-very pretty rendering.
Cal