Showing posts with label Tram. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tram. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 07, 2009
Heart Starter
This shot was taken just over a fortnight ago, as I walked past Flinders Street Station. I noticed there were new posters affixed to the tram shelter between the station and Federation Square.
And I also realised that if I really walked quickly, I'd be able to get a clear shot of the poster through the traffic - with a tram in the background. I wasn't quite quick enough, because the tram was actually moving when I hit the trigger for this shot.
And in case you're wondering what the sticker says up the top of the glass of the tram shelter, it is: "No smoking in covered areas."
Visit the creative team behind That's My World Tuesday.
Saturday, March 24, 2007
Indian Summary
A Tram's-Eye View Of A Stunning Country
Looks like an advertising billboard, doesn't it? Well, yes and no. Yes, it's an advertisemement. But it's actually painted across the side of a Melbourne tram. You know the feeling? You can see a great shot, you've got the camera with you - and you're in completely the wrong position and you've got literally a couple of seconds to shoot it.
There I was, stuck at a traffic light on the intersection of Dandenong Road and Chapel Street in the Melbourne suburb of Prahran. And I could see this tram coming from the opposite direction, with a stunning rendition of the great series of `Incredible !ndia' television ads. If you haven't seen the ads, they contain some amazing cinematography and of course the ad campaign substitutes the capital I in India with an exclamation mark instead.
(If you worked on the ad campaign, or know someone who did, please let me know by leaving a comment here.)
I was in the middle lane, with two vehicles between me and the tram and a schoolboy at the tram stop. Time only for one shot but strangely enough the colours across the frame somehow bleneded well, with the burgundy of both vehicles and the brick on the wall across the street.
I firmly believe in the `integrity' of an image, and I choose not to crop or enhance any photograph I take. But as an experiment, I cropped this frame to exclude most of the two vehicles and I still reckon the original frame is the stronger image.
Let me know what you think. And watch this space for a series of shots from a recent trip to India, the country where I was born and educated and where I began my career in journalism.
Photograph copyright: DAVID McMAHON
Looks like an advertising billboard, doesn't it? Well, yes and no. Yes, it's an advertisemement. But it's actually painted across the side of a Melbourne tram. You know the feeling? You can see a great shot, you've got the camera with you - and you're in completely the wrong position and you've got literally a couple of seconds to shoot it.
There I was, stuck at a traffic light on the intersection of Dandenong Road and Chapel Street in the Melbourne suburb of Prahran. And I could see this tram coming from the opposite direction, with a stunning rendition of the great series of `Incredible !ndia' television ads. If you haven't seen the ads, they contain some amazing cinematography and of course the ad campaign substitutes the capital I in India with an exclamation mark instead.
(If you worked on the ad campaign, or know someone who did, please let me know by leaving a comment here.)
I was in the middle lane, with two vehicles between me and the tram and a schoolboy at the tram stop. Time only for one shot but strangely enough the colours across the frame somehow bleneded well, with the burgundy of both vehicles and the brick on the wall across the street.
I firmly believe in the `integrity' of an image, and I choose not to crop or enhance any photograph I take. But as an experiment, I cropped this frame to exclude most of the two vehicles and I still reckon the original frame is the stronger image.
Let me know what you think. And watch this space for a series of shots from a recent trip to India, the country where I was born and educated and where I began my career in journalism.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)