1 post tagged “contemporary”
Okay, one more thing before hopping into bed, curling up with the freshly-arrived Dark Knight DVD (thank YOU, Netflix!), and seeing if I can't get a whopping 13 hours of sleep the first day after my oral surgery, and thus stay on my usual sleep schedule...
I keep forgetting to take these while I'm out, but I finally took my first series of photos yesterday for use in panoramic software, resulting in the stitched image you see above. Do make sure to take a look at it in its biggest size; that's the precise thing I'm excited about with this S550 and panoramic shots, is that I can finally do ones that are high in quality from one edge to the other, ones I could actually print and frame if I wanted, after doing a fine-tuning of the settings and getting a really smooth shot (which admittedly today's example is most certainly not). I've got to get more into the habit, but I'm really hoping to present a lot more of these, and to hopefully take more care with future ones and get the elements more perfectly aligned.
This is the 3300 block of North Clark (north to your left, east to your right), halfway between Belmont and Roscoe in the Lakeview neigborhood on the northside, or in other words three city blocks (six human-sized blocks) south of Wrigley Field. It's precisely because this block is so typical, I think, that makes it a perfect example of why nearly every block on the northside sometimes seems cool and unique; notice here the great combination of old Industrial-Age buildings and modern, how several have been gussied up in a "Painted Ladies" style color scheme, how many of the first floors have been renovated into very contemporary pubs and restaurants and boutiques, how the entire thing is surrounded by tall, mature trees. Chicago is a very thriving, very alive city, in an American Midwest full of dying Industrial-Age cities; and you can see that even on just random corners of residential neighborhoods, which the block in this image very definitely is. I have to confess, I really loving in a section of an urban environment where I'm surrounded by scenes like this, an active city environment that relies on the cultural, architectural, and culinary diversity of immigration combining with the jobs and money of the creative class, sitting on a broad sturdy base of history and gravitas. Maybe that's a bit too flowery a way to put it, but you hopefully see my point.
I keep forgetting to take these while I'm out, but I finally took my first series of photos yesterday for use in panoramic software, resulting in the stitched image you see above. Do make sure to take a look at it in its biggest size; that's the precise thing I'm excited about with this S550 and panoramic shots, is that I can finally do ones that are high in quality from one edge to the other, ones I could actually print and frame if I wanted, after doing a fine-tuning of the settings and getting a really smooth shot (which admittedly today's example is most certainly not). I've got to get more into the habit, but I'm really hoping to present a lot more of these, and to hopefully take more care with future ones and get the elements more perfectly aligned.
This is the 3300 block of North Clark (north to your left, east to your right), halfway between Belmont and Roscoe in the Lakeview neigborhood on the northside, or in other words three city blocks (six human-sized blocks) south of Wrigley Field. It's precisely because this block is so typical, I think, that makes it a perfect example of why nearly every block on the northside sometimes seems cool and unique; notice here the great combination of old Industrial-Age buildings and modern, how several have been gussied up in a "Painted Ladies" style color scheme, how many of the first floors have been renovated into very contemporary pubs and restaurants and boutiques, how the entire thing is surrounded by tall, mature trees. Chicago is a very thriving, very alive city, in an American Midwest full of dying Industrial-Age cities; and you can see that even on just random corners of residential neighborhoods, which the block in this image very definitely is. I have to confess, I really loving in a section of an urban environment where I'm surrounded by scenes like this, an active city environment that relies on the cultural, architectural, and culinary diversity of immigration combining with the jobs and money of the creative class, sitting on a broad sturdy base of history and gravitas. Maybe that's a bit too flowery a way to put it, but you hopefully see my point.