Thursday, 7 July 2011

Up Again Soon

I've been a little busy recently. Well for the last 4 months pretty much. What with work, school, social life...

I will be up and running more productively in the next month or so.

Thursday, 17 February 2011

People Watching

 I like to people watch. Down the Bund is a fairly interesting place to do it, since there are loads upon loads of tourists. I can't even remember what I was doing down there, I think I may have just been going for a walk. But it was a relatively clear day, which is saying something.

 It looks quieter than it does because this is a slightly elevated section of the bit along the river.

 The cleaner seemed to know I was taking a picture of him. But never mind.

This is another attempt at long exposure. With so many people around, I thought it might make a nice effect with the blurriness. Will probably try this again. Again, I don't exactly remember what I was doing. I apply guesswork to everything rather liberally.

Lots of people stand around doing this. It's probably a lot better in colour.

I was staring at the back of the his head for ages, waiting for him to turn around.

I was looking at the tour guide in the background, holding the strange flower thing.

I like this because the guy is pretty chilled out, but also the skyline in so impressive.

Tuesday, 15 February 2011

Productive Experimenting

I am more than happy to admit that I am more of an accidental picture taker, than anything else. I generally get by with more luck than skill, but they say it's better to be lucky than good. Someone does at least. But something I have really not tried very often is photography at night. Mainly because when I take out my camera I just about never remember to bring a flash, since I prioritise different lenses over flashes. Anyway. I also just about never take out a tripod either. I will do, at some point. When the weather is better I suppose. Anyway. So I was down on the Bund one night, as you do, and I happened to have my camera with me. So I thought I would try my hand at long exposures. Not really having a clue as to what I was doing, I just guessed. A lot. 
 
 I had to rest the camera on a little ledge to do this. I think I may have held down the shutter for about 10-15 seconds. I simply had the aperture open as wide as it would go, which I think on this lens is only about 4 or something. Not great, but whatever. But the results are not too shabby. Not having a tripod and due to the level the camera was resting at, I have cut out the top of the Pearl Tower (the building that looks like a rocket ship) in every shot. Which is a shame. But such is life.

This I just held down longer, you can tell from the halo effect.

 This is the Bund. Maybe I left the shutter open a little too long, but I am glad that it is a pretty quiet evening so there is no-one in the photo. The reason being that it was so bloody cold.

 I like the effect of the street lights as they go down along the river. And the buildings down the end stand out nicely.

So the tallest building in the background is the Shanghai World Financial Centre. It's like the 3rd tallest building in the world. I keep meaning to go up and get a good view of the city, but when the weather is nicer, I think it will be better. Next to it is the Jin Mao Tower, which is one of the highest hotels in the world. I remember back in the day before they finished building it. Until 2007 it was the tallest building in Shanghai. They are planning on building something else there that will be taller than the pair of them. Glorified pissing contest methinks.

Monday, 14 February 2011

Old Buildings and a Garden and Stuff

I couldn't think of anything witty or interesting for a title. I mentioned previously that I was in Suzhou. It's about an hour outside of Shanghai by bus and has quite interesting things to look at/take photos of. There is a Chinese saying that goes "Above there is heaven [or paradise], below is Suzhou". There are a couple of rather nice preserved old school high walled gardens that you generally see in Chinese films that house aristocrats/bureaucrats.

I went to a couple of them, but the one that is generally somewhat famous is called 'The Humble Administrator's Garden'. It's considered one of the finest in southern China. The footprint of the whole place is quite big, some 50'000m2 (I may have googled that) and it's a bit less than 500 years old. It was cut up and divided at various times over the years, but was pretty much sewn back together after the civil war. Anyway. It's an interesting place to wander around. I happened to go the week before Chinese New Year (新年快乐, by the way), so it was pretty quiet, and there was still a little snow lying around so it was very picturesque. Well, sort of. It was nice as there were so few people around, as it probably gets heaving in the summer, but since it is still winter there are just about no pretty colours. It's all a bit grey. Which is good for me, as you aren't really missing out with black and white.

Next to where I was standing there is pavilion where you can sit and look across the rather large pond/small lake thing, and see the pagoda in the background. Annoyingly there were people sitting there doing just that so, I stood to the left and got pretty much the same view. 

 A lot of effort goes in to these things, they are very interestingly sculpted gardens and lots of different pavilions so you can sit and enjoy the different scenery from different view points.

 There is something special about this corridor, something to do with the length of it and the square holes in the wall, and looking through it. I wasn't quite paying attention at this point when it was explained to me, but revel in it's wonder if you will.

I'm slightly annoyed about this photo for a couple of reasons. I cut the bottom of it off, because I was trying to take it quickly, but mostly because I stood there for ages trying to frame in a nice way, and there was not a single person walking around. As soon as I wanted to take the picture, these people started walking past. Well not these people, but just a bloody great long trail of them and not one cottoned on to the fact that I wasn't quite interested in taking pictures of them. I didn't really have the patience to wait any longer either. It's intentionally off centre though - I feel I should point that out... 
As is the next one.

 This is just the other side of it. I have been meaning to find out why they have doorways like this.

I will try and head back when the weather is better because I imagine the colours would be quite impressive. Particularly for these.

It was a nice day, and I liked the look of this thing. 

 I would have liked to have been closer to catch this kid running. But as you can probably guess from the slightly off angle I was in a hurry to take this (actually, these are usually slightly skewed).

 Like so. I was trying to get the doorway and the open window and make it look cool and interesting, but I probably should have moved back.


I just like the way there is still snow on the ground. Stupid people wouldn't get out of my way, and well I have a no doctoring pictures policy (bar that one from Bristol. Shhh).

Saturday, 12 February 2011

Service Interruption

I can't seem to get on to blogger long enough to upload photos before getting kicked off again (up until Thursday I was just being a little slack). New updates in a couple of days. Hopefully.

Thursday, 3 February 2011

Our Forests The Pylons of High Tension Wires

Street level: Slightly more interesting...

After my trip around Bristol, and taking photos of random, yet eye catching graffiti, I have started paying way more attention to little things you tend to see about cities. In Shanghai it's usually the bicycles that always stick out in my mind, particularly as there isn't a whole lot of street art. Not that there isn't, it's usually just a little harder to see so much. But it's not only that; I think it is also the way you see certain things, juxtaposed to others. There is a sign on a wall I used to walk past fairly regularly in Oxford saying: 

Bill Stickers 
Will Be 
Prosecuted 

and underneath someone has scrawled 'Bill Stickers is innocent'. It's just one of those things that makes you smile. Unfortunately I never got round to getting a photo of it, but you can see it here


I like things like this. It was written on to the window of a bar/club thing that I walked past. And since I love cities, I'm a bit of a sucker for things like this.


I'm annoyed that this is slightly out of focus, but never mind. I think they are cooking oil and paint canisters, but I honestly have no idea.


Rock on.


With all the buildings, and rather confined space, you get these pretty cool looking short alleys. The fisheye helps I guess.


Same goes for this one really, although, I like this one a little more because of the way the scene is busy just in one corner, but you still get the light coming down across the wall.


I just like the colours here. And the lines look like they might not be parallel.


I always notice these, and I guess that's the point. It's hardly advertising, or maybe it is, and I must confess I always like to read them. This lamp post is at the bottom of a steep set of stairs so you end up fairly close to it, and at eye level.


No Bills, but drawing on the walls is ok obviously.


Cheerio.

Tuesday, 1 February 2011

Cityscape

When I went to Hong Kong, I wasn't sure what to expect from a photographic aspect. Obviously there are loads to see in cities, so there wasn't going to be a lack of things, but I just not sure. I have been there before, indeed lived there briefly yonks ago, but I wasn't entirely sure after a 13 year absence. I had a very good time whilst I was there either way. I pretty much wandered around for 4 days with two cameras slung around my neck and just kind of had a nose around. 


I only really have one other photo from a city in this kind of way and that was from New York, where I basically took one picture of buildings at funny angles. Here I was trying to do the same kind of thing.


Hong Kong island is a bit hilly (really hilly in fact), and you can kind of get a sense of the gradient by the distance of the people in the left hand side of this picture, but what I was more interested in is the bamboo on the right. I love the fact that you will always see bamboo on construction.


Cookie cutter concrete jungle. 


Right, this is the observation platform on Victoria Peak. The picture's a little grainy, and even though it is pretty empty as a photo, but I was pretty fortunate to get the plane in it.


All the land in the bottom is reclaimed land. 
Hong Kong will be great when they're finished building it.


The alleys are pretty cool to use a fish eye lens on. Just to get the street level and the tops of buildings in one shot. You get a much better idea of the scale of things.


So I've probably ripped off loads of other photos here, but whatever.


Whoever lives here is really bloody lucky. The views are great. Not that you can tell from the picture, but I was on the Peak, looking down, and you get a great view of Kowloon.


This view in fact...