Blog Archives
Underbelly
Posted by Melinda Green Harvey
Our tour group got to go below the tower, to look at the system of hydraulic lifts that operate the elevators. It was interesting even though I was busy taking pictures and missed a lot of the explanation.
It was also sad: I thought how fun it would be to tell my dad – a civil engineer – about it when I got home. It’s coming up on two years since he passed away, so I guess I didn’t get to Paris soon enough.
Eiffel Tower
Paris
photographed 6.8.2017
Invocation of science
Posted by Melinda Green Harvey
This would have been slightly more interesting if I’d known it while I was there, but there are 72 names on the Eiffel Tower; Gustave Eiffel called it “an invocation of science” because of his concerns over protests against the tower. It doesn’t sound especially plausible, that a list of names would calm down protesters, but the very existence of the tower indicates that it worked. I guess.
(Click for a larger view, and you can see them, at the bottom of that rectangular section.)
Eiffel Tower
Paris
photographed 6.8.2017
That View
Posted by Melinda Green Harvey
I had to. And I’m not sorry, either.
Eiffel Tower
Paris
photographed 6.8.2017
Light me like a candle
Posted by Melinda Green Harvey
It was a little disconcerting to visit the great cathedral while Mass was going on. But it did give me a couple of photographic opportunities that I would have otherwise missed.
Cathédrale de Notre-Dame de Paris
Paris, France
photographed 6.11.2017
Posted in Photography
Tags: 365 photo project, architecture, black and white photography, candles, Cathédrale de Notre-Dame de Paris, church, France, learning to see, Leica, Mass, melinda green harvey, monochrome, Notre Dame, one day one image, Paris, photo a day, photography, postaday, thoughtful seeing
Eyes Pulled Upward
Posted by Melinda Green Harvey
The very first thing I did was look up. How could I not?
Cathédrale de Notre-Dame de Paris
Paris, France
photographed 6.11.2017




