A confusion
The Klyde Warren Park in Dallas was sort of expensive*.
But for the money, the park got a very interesting pavilion with polished chrome panels that give interesting – if confusing – reflections of the urban landscape. (I’d try to explain what’s real and what’s a reflection, but now that I think about it – upon reflection, as it were – I don’t think it matters. And also, I’m not sure I could tell you.)
Dallas, Texas
photographed 1.10.2015
*$116,700,000.
Posted on January 30, 2015, in Photography and tagged 365 photo project, architecture, black and white photography, dallas, dallas texas, downtown, Klyde Warren Park, melinda green harvey, monochrome, NIK Silver Efex Pro 2, one day one image, photo a day, photography, texas. Bookmark the permalink. 8 Comments.
So surreal, Melinda. A visual montage.
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Thanks, Andy. Some of it doesn’t even make sense to me, and I stood RIGHT THERE and make the image…
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Great piece and great capture – a bit of confusion is good sometimes – we need to not have everything so predictable in life and our images.
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Very good observation, Robert. I didn’t get many good shots the day I visited this park: it was very cold and too cloudy to get anything like, you know, contrast or shadows. But when I think about it, it seems like maybe these polished chrome parts of the pavilion would be too much in full sun.
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I’d love to see what I’d get with IR
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For some reason this reminds me of those shots from Fan Tan Alley in Victoria. This one especially: https://melindagreenharveydotcom.files.wordpress.com/2014/09/bonus.jpg
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Wow – I hadn’t made that connection at all! But there are similarities, and I’m glad one of us (you, specifically) paid enough to attention to notice it!
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