Tag Archives: NYC

eye candy

Tulip at Upper West Side Community Garden

captured at the Upper West Side Community Garden, NYC

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all alone…

single car in parking lot of NYC

But not lonely…

Posted in Local sights | 3 Comments

the love of books

captured at grant's tomb, upper west side, nyc

 ”There are many little ways to enlarge your child’s world. Love of books is the best of all.”
Jacqueline Kennedy

 

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photography as a healing art – chapter five

 Portrait of a Soul

(This is a series of posts on Jan Phillips’ book, God is at Eye Level, Photography as a Healing Art.  For an intro check out the first post here.)

Still reflecting on the importance of the connection or relationship in photography, the author takes it a step further in chapter five by discussing the body language that speaks our inner voice, conversing through the language of eyes and smiles.  “My portraits grew out of this closeness and expressed the intimacy from which they emerged.

For me, taking portraits of people that I don’t know is challenging, particularly street photography. I’m not the “in your face” type photographer.  Don’t get me wrong, with a fabulous zoom lens I do use it occasionally for capturing people, but it lacks the connection for me, it lacks the soul connection.

A few days ago while exploring the East Village here in NYC,  my eyes always constantly looking at locations and evaluating their potential for a portrait capture, I came across a street with some incredible murals.  Sitting there in front of this work of art was a man just hanging out, minding his own business and voila – the PERFECT scenario for a portrait shot.

But as mentioned, it’s very difficult for me to just shove my camera in his face.  So by using “the language of eyes and smiles” we exchanged pleasantries and ended up sitting together for a half hour or so while I learned that Ron is a street person and has lived all over the boroughs of New York City.

Ron

He was quite the talker and we chatted for a while about my passion for photography.  He was so intrigued about digital photography and just couldn’t grasp the fact that you didn’t need film and a dark room to view the finished product. When preparing to leave, he was quick to invite me back…”Oh, I’m always in the hood, come back and see me…you’ll find me…”

As Phillips’ states, “I wanted to interact with them, and I wanted my images to reflect some connection, no matter how brief or limited.  That connection was the healing part, the place where I learned time and again that it is not language or custom or creed that unites us, but the spirit within that’s common to us all.

Well said, Ms. Phillips, well said.

Ron in the east village, nyc

Next week:  Chapter Six – Speaking our Peace

 

Joining in for the first time?  Catch up on the previous chapters!

Chapter One – Through the Eyes of a Child

Chapter Two – Seeing Our Way Clear

Chapter Three – Shifting the Focus

Chapter Four -  Looking Like No Other

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wabi-sabi saturday

 

captured at the antiques garage in chelsea, nyc

This is an ongoing series on Saturdays showcasing my wabi-sabi find of the week. 

What is wabi-sabi? 

Learn about it here and here.

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acceptance…

Thousands of hours…thousands of dollars…

Yep, for fifty years I’d love to know how many hours were spent drying my hair straight and how much money went towards products to tame the wild.

Let’s start at the beginning.  I’ve tried to remember when I first realized my hair wasn’t “normal.”  Looking back at baby photos and childhood school pictures it seemed manageable.  At least I don’t remember screaming and crying that my hair wouldn’t behave. (Now perhaps my mom has a different story, Mom?)  And yes, some photos appeared to have a touch of being out of control, but in general I looked pretty “normal.”  But high school was a totally different story.

During those high school years, I was faced with out of control, curly, bushy hair.  I can remember sleeping on huge curlers, large enough to remind me of those Minute Maid Premium frozen lemonade cans.   I had to go to bed with them as it’d take at least eight hours for my hair to dry. Should I even write about getting up even earlier so I could go by my girlfriend’s house to have her iron my hair? Yes, iron my hair with an iron…on an ironing board.  Ahhh, but then came the hard bonnet dryer.  Can’t remember how many of those I had in my lifetime.  That would take at least 45 minutes to an hour to dry my hair, but much better than eight.  And…I didn’t have to sleep in them!  And yes, if I went anywhere, guess what had to come along?  Yep, even when I went with my boyfriend and his parents to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina when I was seventeen, my trusty bonnet was my best friend and it tagged along.  Oh and the beach….unless you have curly hair you have no idea how horrific it is to take vacations near and on water.  Oh, and the taming (not tanning) products.  I can’t even go there…to much post traumatic stress.

As I worked my way up the corporate ladder and worked tons of hours like good corporate lackeys do… the juice cans had to go. Not even enough hours in the day, and certainly not enough to spend time on hair.  So somewhere along the way, I had it cut.  Cut short.  I mean real short.  Viola…I went from one hour to ten minutes in nothing flat. It also helped that by then, blowdryers went from 600 to 1,000 watts.  Major progress!  BTW, after my first trip to Europe, I was tired of blowing circuits in the hotel rooms with my dryer, so from then on a blow dryer was purchased upon arrival.  Yes, I have several from various countries.  Hair stylists ruled the world, because when it’s very short, there’s less curl…but that also means lots of hair cuts.  You get the drill.  Lots of money. I lived in Scottsdale you see.  So let’s just fast forward.

Years later and no corporate, I decided to embrace my natural curly hair.  Yes, it was time to accept and love myself as I am at age 50. So here I am a few (ok five) years later, my hair as long as it was when I was a teenager and I’m finally accepting my curls.  There are good hair days and there are not so good hair days.  But I have to say, I’ve never felt more liberated than I do today with the status of my hair.  The ocean, the rain, the humidity…I say…bring it on!

Now if I could just learn to accept my natural color…  Hmm, NO.  Been there, done that and not ready to go back there, but that’s another story.  So now I get my hair colored in Soho, NYC.  Ching-a-ling.

Cross-posted over at Vision and Verb -

where a collaborative group of like-minded women from all over the world

share their passion for photography and the written word.

 

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handcrafted millinery in the east village

A multi-cultural human bazaar. I read that once in a description of the East Village in Manhattan. How true, how true.

A warm spring like afternoon couldn’t have been more perfect to ramble around and explore this grungy, hip and oh so fascinating area of the city. Walking along East 12th street between Avenue A and Avenue B, she caught my eye.  The lighting, the hat, the suppleness of the skin, the eye lashes, the lips. She immediately had me under her spell.

artikal boutique in the east village, nyc

It was if I could feel my grandmother’s presence.  You see my grandmother was a buyer for yarns and crafts at a large department store in my hometown of Roanoke, Virginia.

my grandmother

She loved to knit, crochet, create and was an expert in her field.  She had style, a presence, a couture look about her. When visiting her, I would often be at the bus stop when she arrived home from work watching for those long slender legs to step down those steps to the curb.  The shoes, the knit skirts and coordinating tops and oh…the hats.  I would always be mesmerized, regardless of how many times I saw her getting off that bus.

Seeing that hat in the East Village brought me right back to those moments.  As I was photographing a voice behind me…That’s my studio, would you like my card?  A brief chat and we were both on our way.  Hours later I researched Artikal, the studio, and learned the owner grew up in northern Virginia and from a young age was inspired to create.  She had been influenced by her grandmother, an award-winning dressmaker who loved to crochet.  Years later here she is in the East Village having mastered millinery techniques and now ships hats all over the world.

Now, if I can just get inside of her “by appointment only” boutique to take more photos of those incredible hats.

Stay tuned.

Posted in Family/Friends, Local sights, People, Shopping | Also tagged , , , , , , 8 Comments

bringing closure to winter…

 

Is it too early to say those words?  With warm temperatures here in the city we’re already spoiled with spring like days.  Before we know it this wall of ivy on West 89th Street here in the neighborhood of the Upper West Side will be splattered with green.  But is it just a tease?  Are there more winter days ahead?

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it’s getting closer…

Spring is nipping at our heels…move over winter cabbage!

Time for crocus, daffodils, tulips, and magnolias!

winter cabbage on west 89th street, nyc

Posted in Local sights, Weather | Also tagged 2 Comments

art on the streets…

 

Betten Art

west 27th street in chelsea, nyc

Artist – Jordan Betten

Founder – Lost Art and Betten Art

Think about those leather pelts and skins that musicians like to wear…
Lenny Kravitz, Steven Tyler and Sheryl Crow…
Yep, he’s the artist!

 

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