Oly35LC_20100411_016.jpg
Olympus 35 LC – Ilford HP5 – Rodinal 1:50

Looking>

I happened to photograph the guy above one morning on the way to work. Although my building would be directly to his back, I like to walk past the building, shoot a bit, and relax before going into work. I usually arrive downtown about 8:30, arrive at Bank of American Center at 8:40, but I don’t go inside until 9:00 AM.

The interesting thing about this shot, for me, is that the guy and the statue are looking in the same basic direction. FYI: The name of this particular statue is Industry; It is one of four statues on that corner. All really cool works of art.

Well, it’s a start. Time to get the M6 out and have at it. Oh yeah, this is the first roll of film that I’ve ever developed in Charlotte. :-)

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  7 Responses to “On the street in Charlotte”

  1. Dang right it’s time for the M6. Looking forward to your images. Interestng, do you know who this guy is in the image? I also like his shadow.

  2. My word, the tones and crispness in the top image are like ‘buh-tah.’ Just exquisite. Hey, a question: when you scan your negs, how much do you sharpen them? Just curious. Also love the conrast of him in his shirt against the darker background. Great shot.

    • Chris: I have the scanner bring them in with a minimal amount of sharpening. I find that with the Leica that I do not have to sharpen at all during the scan or in post processing. With the Olympus, I have to sharpen just a little bit on export. In this case, a small amount of sharpening was applied during export with Lightroom.

      My experience has been that my film images need little to no sharpening at all, regardless of the camera. All of the digital images seem to need just a hint of sharpening to make them look crisp.

  3. Great catch. If this is a representative sample of what we are in for, then bring on the Charlotte street scenes.

  4. Paul, to me your street photos from Charleston, for the most part, seemed to have a laid-back, relaxed feel to them. I would expect street photos from Charlotte to have a more stressful feel. It will be interesting to see it that proves out — I think it does in these first two. :-)

    • Interesting thoughts, Earl. We’ll see what turns up in the upcoming weeks and months. Certainly, Charlotte is a busier town, a banking town, and downtown Charleston is all about tourism. I’m not even sure what is in downtown Charleston other than shops, restaurants, bars, churches, and historic homes. I do, however, know what is in downtown Charlotte: shops, restaurants, bars, a few churches, no historic homes, and banks, banks, and more banks … oh, did I mention that there are banks here. :-)

      There are lots of peaceful, landscaped spaces in Charlotte, but also lots of grimed, determined, business faces. I’d never thought of it that way, now I shall make an attempt to forget about it so that I can see it as unbiased as possible. ;-)

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