Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Bromo Tower at Dusk

Bromo Tower - Baltimore, MarylandSometimes it pays to work late.

I was heading back to the Light Rail stop about 9 PM tonight, and the sky was geting darker, but not yet black. Looking up just about a half-block away from my stop, I noticed how the nicely-lit the Bromo Tower contrasted with the dark blue sky.

I didn't bring one of my small digicam tripods with me today, but there was a handy, flat-topped traffic barrel in just about the right spot to rest Ben's flat-sided Canon A630. I took about 25 exposures at the longest tele setting (equivalent to 135mm on 35mm) from ISO 80 to 400. This was the best of the lot at ISO 100.

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1 Comments:

Blogger Warren T. said...

Striking colors! This is my favorite time of the day for shades of blue. I like how you positioned the two structures in the foreground. BTW, I don't think I personally would have had the patience to take 25 shots of the same scene! :)

--WT

Tuesday, July 1, 2008 at 9:06:00 PM PDT  

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Friday, June 27, 2008

Oat Rentals

Trident Electric Boat Rentals - Baltimore Inner HarborThe thing that first attracted me to this scene was the neon sign, slightly crooked, within the black and white frame of the window. But then the attendent, who had been out of my view on the other end of the dock, walked into my viewfinder, his shift almost over, and made a phone call. I thought his dark skin and white clothing complemented the non-color scheme of the rental shed in the background.

I held down the shutter button to shoot a lot of pictures with him sitting right there, but in this one, his body English and facial expression was the best of the lot.

Back at home on the computer, I noticed that the red life vests could make a nice design element, a triangle right into the left lower edge of the frame.

But only if I cropped the image to "OAT RENTALS."


The Power Of Critique

Warren made a suggestion to crop out the "OAT RENTALS" at the top of the photo. I was just a bit skeptical - I had rather liked the bold, white-on-black lettering, but tried it.

Well, now I'm with Warren - the composition looks cleaner and more balanced to me now.

What do you think?

Thanks, Warren!

By the way, Dolph's comment about this having an "islands" flavor made sense - but in fact, this place is right on the waterfront of Baltimore's Inner Harbor. I'm gonna make a nice print and leave it for "Island Man," or hopefully, give it directly to him. Hope he likes it.

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4 Comments:

Blogger Warren T. said...

i like the red life vest "element". it does add to the composition. However, even though the photo is titled: Oat Rentals, just my opinion, but the large letters on top take too much attention from the rest of the photo. I would either crop out half of the letters, or the entire sign from the photo. I like how the red vests balance and complement the neon sign. The expression and posture of the figure is really nice for a candid shot.

Sunday, June 29, 2008 at 8:32:00 AM PDT  
Blogger Dolph Brust said...

Looks like a picture from one of the the island man. You seem to have captured the attitude of the islands. Nice Pic and good use of contrasting.

Sunday, June 29, 2008 at 7:28:00 PM PDT  
Blogger Warren T. said...

Steve, thank for posting the 2nd version. I like it a lot! Let us know how the "Island Man" likes his picture.

--WT

Tuesday, July 1, 2008 at 2:38:00 PM PDT  
Blogger Dolph Brust said...

When I read about this art form, they always come back to "keep it simple." I like the second composition better. The original was attempting to tell two stories. This has one, and gives me the feeling of being at the docks ready to go fishing.

Tuesday, July 1, 2008 at 8:05:00 PM PDT  

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Bromo Tower and ... Beatles

Holiday Inn & Bromo Tower - Baltimore, MDOn one overseas business trip in 1978, I got to spend a weekend in Florence, Italy. At one point during a stroll around that beautiful city, I looked up and suddenly saw a familiar sight - the Bromo Tower of Baltimore!

Actually, it was the Palazzo Vecchio, but architect Joseph Evans Sperry used the tower of this 14th-century structure as inspiration for the 1911 Emerson Bromo-Seltzer Tower. Sperry's client was Captain Isaac Emerson, a sea captain and inventor of Bromo Seltzer.

The 15-story tower was originally topped by a 51-foot revolving replica of the deep-blue Bromo Seltzer bottle. Brightly illuminated at night, ships sailing up the Chesapeake to Baltimore would navigate by it. Until the Baltimore Trust Company Building claimed the title in 1924, the Bromo Tower was the tallest structure in Baltimore.

Since 1936, the Bromo Tower has been bottle-less, and by the sixties, the building itself had deteriorated.

The Baltimore Office of Promotion and Arts did a great job renovating the Bromo Tower just a few years ago. The former office building is now leased out as studios for artists.

In the photo above, the curved shape is the revolving rooftop restaurant of the Holiday Inn. Well, it doesn't revolve anymore, and the restaurant, Circle One closed in 1974, but there it is. It's only claim to fame is that the Beatles, on September 13, 1964, played a concert at Baltimore's Civic Center, just across the street, and then stayed overnight in the then-brand-new hotel. By the way, they did get to dine in the revolving rooftoop restaurant, and back then, it did revolve.

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5 Comments:

Blogger Warren T. said...

At first glance, i thought this WAS the Palazzo Vecchio :). Then I noticed the modern structure next to it.

Just my opinion, but perhaps this one is just a smidge too dark? Maybe dodge some of the highlights, like the very top of the curved shape to accentuate it.

--WT

Friday, June 27, 2008 at 3:53:00 PM PDT  
Blogger Steve Rosenbach said...

Thanks, Warren - I wondered that myself. I pulled it off of Ben's camera a lunch today at work, and there I only have Picassa - I'll try some more subtle manipulation in PSE at home.

Friday, June 27, 2008 at 5:53:00 PM PDT  
Blogger Warren T. said...

Steve, i viewed the picture on a different monitor, and tried changing angles, etc. on the original monitor, and my opinion now is that it's fine the way it is. Not too dark after all. :)

--WT

Sunday, June 29, 2008 at 9:05:00 AM PDT  
Blogger Dolph Brust said...

Steve,

While we are here on the east coast we want to get to Europe and see some of the great sites similar to this. Like Warren I would like to see more of the details, but the darkness hides them. Did you do this on purpose?

Sunday, June 29, 2008 at 7:41:00 PM PDT  
Blogger Steve Rosenbach said...

Hi Dolph,

Yes, I darkened it on purpose, hoping to emphasize the shapes and the contrast between the 1911 and the 1964 architecture.

Also, the Holiday Inn itself is not very good-looking in detail ;-)

Tuesday, July 1, 2008 at 11:44:00 AM PDT  

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