Candler Building
I get to go to work every day in this handsome 1930's building at 111 Market Place.
Inside, the building was completely renovated years ago; it's a thoroughly modern and very pleasant workspace. The lobby, complete with marble steps and columns, presents visitors and residents with an elegant welcome.
The architects of Candler Building really knew their stuff when it came to classical lines and proportions, fenestration, and so forth. Mind you, I don't really know what I'm talking about when it comes to architecture; my admittedly untutored view of what makes for good architecture is strikingly similar to Justice Potter Stewart's famous take on pornography - "I know it when I see it."
Lately, I've come to realize one way I can tell good architecture from bad is a simple test: if I find that a building is interesting to photograph, it's probably good architecture. If not, it's probably banal. Or worse.
Although in most areas of life I'm a pretty easy-going guy, architecture is an exception.
I think bad public architecture should be a capital offense (I'm looking at you, Hilton Baltimore Hotel!)
Inside, the building was completely renovated years ago; it's a thoroughly modern and very pleasant workspace. The lobby, complete with marble steps and columns, presents visitors and residents with an elegant welcome.
The architects of Candler Building really knew their stuff when it came to classical lines and proportions, fenestration, and so forth. Mind you, I don't really know what I'm talking about when it comes to architecture; my admittedly untutored view of what makes for good architecture is strikingly similar to Justice Potter Stewart's famous take on pornography - "I know it when I see it."
Lately, I've come to realize one way I can tell good architecture from bad is a simple test: if I find that a building is interesting to photograph, it's probably good architecture. If not, it's probably banal. Or worse.
Although in most areas of life I'm a pretty easy-going guy, architecture is an exception.
I think bad public architecture should be a capital offense (I'm looking at you, Hilton Baltimore Hotel!)
Labels: Architecture, Baltimore, Candler Building
4 Comments:
Interesting use of wide angle to produce abstract radial line pattern, Steve.
--WT
Thanks, Warren - now here's the funny thing - when I saw the photo (it was a few days after taking it) I thought I'd taken it with my 18-55mm zoom set at the wide end. I looked at the metadata, and to my surprise, it was at 55mm - short tele!
I think the thing that gives the WA feel is that I was very close to the building, shooting upward.
Back in the digital darkroom (Photoshop Elements 4), I adjusted levels by setting black point and pulling white point a little to the left (image was a little underexposed) and some contrast sharpening using Unsharp Mask. Then I used the "skew" Image-Transform to correct the perspective distortion. That's about it.
Perhaps the perspective distortion correction causes the image to have that stretched, wide angle look to it.
--WT
I was looking back in the blog a few weeks and just notice that I paraphrase Justice Potter Stewart's pornography quote a lot!
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