I love you almost as much as I love this pizza … or did I get that backwards?

I love you almost as much as I love this pizza … or did I get that backwards?

Note: I chose this as my "photo of the day" for May 18, 2013

**************************

As I have noted in several earlier Flickr albums, as long as I continue going to the same NYC dentist, you can count on two or three sets of photos of Bryant Park each year. The reason is simple: my dentist is located in mid-town Manhattan, about a block from the park — and when I'm done, I'm always tempted to walk over and see how the park looks. Consequently, I've collected almost a dozen separate sets of Bryant Park photos, which you can see summarized here on Flickr. (At least one or two of those other sets will provide you with the historical details of the park; or you can look it up here on Wikipedia.)

In late April and early May of 2013, I took another stroll through the park, not having been there for nearly nine months -- but not because of a visit to the dentist, but because of another common excuse for being in this part of NYC: I was taking a photography class at the nearby International Center of Photography, and I had half an hour of spare time before my class began. It was still early spring summer, but the weather was mild, and the central lawn was green and completely empty, because the groundskeepers had roped it off to ensure the grass would finish growing before it gets trampled over by millions of visitors

I wandered mostly around the periphery of the park, looking for interesting scenes to capture with the Sony Alpha-65 and NEX-7 cameras that I happened to have with me. I locked the camera into a wide-angle setting and a fixed f/8 aperture, and I just pointed the camera in the general direction of an interesting scene, and pushed the shutter button. Of the few hundred shots that I took during these strolls, there were a handful that seemed worthy of uploading; that's what you'll be seeing in this set. All of this took roughly an hour, at the end of which I put away my camera, and wandered off to my class in the ICP building ...

Anyone can see this photo AttributionNoncommercialShare Alike Some rights reserved

Uploaded on May 18, 2013  |  Map

77 views / 1 favorite / 2 comments

 
Knees up, feet down

Knees up, feet down

(Note: more details later, as time permits.)

**************************

As I have noted in several earlier Flickr albums, as long as I continue going to the same NYC dentist, you can count on two or three sets of photos of Bryant Park each year. The reason is simple: my dentist is located in mid-town Manhattan, about a block from the park — and when I'm done, I'm always tempted to walk over and see how the park looks. Consequently, I've collected almost a dozen separate sets of Bryant Park photos, which you can see summarized here on Flickr. (At least one or two of those other sets will provide you with the historical details of the park; or you can look it up here on Wikipedia.)

In late April and early May of 2013, I took another stroll through the park, not having been there for nearly nine months -- but not because of a visit to the dentist, but because of another common excuse for being in this part of NYC: I was taking a photography class at the nearby International Center of Photography, and I had half an hour of spare time before my class began. It was still early spring summer, but the weather was mild, and the central lawn was green and completely empty, because the groundskeepers had roped it off to ensure the grass would finish growing before it gets trampled over by millions of visitors

I wandered mostly around the periphery of the park, looking for interesting scenes to capture with the Sony Alpha-65 and NEX-7 cameras that I happened to have with me. I locked the camera into a wide-angle setting and a fixed f/8 aperture, and I just pointed the camera in the general direction of an interesting scene, and pushed the shutter button. Of the few hundred shots that I took during these strolls, there were a handful that seemed worthy of uploading; that's what you'll be seeing in this set. All of this took roughly an hour, at the end of which I put away my camera, and wandered off to my class in the ICP building ...

Anyone can see this photo AttributionNoncommercialShare Alike Some rights reserved

Uploaded on May 18, 2013  |  Map

86 views / 3 favorites / 3 comments

 
Are you really telling your mother that we're going to run away together?

Are you really telling your mother that we're going to run away together?

(Note: more details later, as time permits.)

**************************

As I have noted in several earlier Flickr albums, as long as I continue going to the same NYC dentist, you can count on two or three sets of photos of Bryant Park each year. The reason is simple: my dentist is located in mid-town Manhattan, about a block from the park — and when I'm done, I'm always tempted to walk over and see how the park looks. Consequently, I've collected almost a dozen separate sets of Bryant Park photos, which you can see summarized here on Flickr. (At least one or two of those other sets will provide you with the historical details of the park; or you can look it up here on Wikipedia.)

In late April and early May of 2013, I took another stroll through the park, not having been there for nearly nine months -- but not because of a visit to the dentist, but because of another common excuse for being in this part of NYC: I was taking a photography class at the nearby International Center of Photography, and I had half an hour of spare time before my class began. It was still early spring summer, but the weather was mild, and the central lawn was green and completely empty, because the groundskeepers had roped it off to ensure the grass would finish growing before it gets trampled over by millions of visitors

I wandered mostly around the periphery of the park, looking for interesting scenes to capture with the Sony Alpha-65 and NEX-7 cameras that I happened to have with me. I locked the camera into a wide-angle setting and a fixed f/8 aperture, and I just pointed the camera in the general direction of an interesting scene, and pushed the shutter button. Of the few hundred shots that I took during these strolls, there were a handful that seemed worthy of uploading; that's what you'll be seeing in this set. All of this took roughly an hour, at the end of which I put away my camera, and wandered off to my class in the ICP building ...

Anyone can see this photo AttributionNoncommercialShare Alike Some rights reserved

Uploaded on May 18, 2013  |  Map

66 views / 3 favorites / 3 comments

 
I think I'll just knock all the pieces off the board, and say it was an Act of God ...

I think I'll just knock all the pieces off the board, and say it was an Act of God ...

(Note: more details later, as time permits.)

**************************

As I have noted in several earlier Flickr albums, as long as I continue going to the same NYC dentist, you can count on two or three sets of photos of Bryant Park each year. The reason is simple: my dentist is located in mid-town Manhattan, about a block from the park — and when I'm done, I'm always tempted to walk over and see how the park looks. Consequently, I've collected almost a dozen separate sets of Bryant Park photos, which you can see summarized here on Flickr. (At least one or two of those other sets will provide you with the historical details of the park; or you can look it up here on Wikipedia.)

In late April and early May of 2013, I took another stroll through the park, not having been there for nearly nine months -- but not because of a visit to the dentist, but because of another common excuse for being in this part of NYC: I was taking a photography class at the nearby International Center of Photography, and I had half an hour of spare time before my class began. It was still early spring summer, but the weather was mild, and the central lawn was green and completely empty, because the groundskeepers had roped it off to ensure the grass would finish growing before it gets trampled over by millions of visitors

I wandered mostly around the periphery of the park, looking for interesting scenes to capture with the Sony Alpha-65 and NEX-7 cameras that I happened to have with me. I locked the camera into a wide-angle setting and a fixed f/8 aperture, and I just pointed the camera in the general direction of an interesting scene, and pushed the shutter button. Of the few hundred shots that I took during these strolls, there were a handful that seemed worthy of uploading; that's what you'll be seeing in this set. All of this took roughly an hour, at the end of which I put away my camera, and wandered off to my class in the ICP building ...

Anyone can see this photo AttributionNoncommercialShare Alike Some rights reserved

Uploaded on May 17, 2013  |  Map

93 views / 3 favorites / 9 comments

 
Ugh. He's going to checkmate me in three moves….

Ugh. He's going to checkmate me in three moves….

(Note: more details later, as time permits.)

**************************

As I have noted in several earlier Flickr albums, as long as I continue going to the same NYC dentist, you can count on two or three sets of photos of Bryant Park each year. The reason is simple: my dentist is located in mid-town Manhattan, about a block from the park — and when I'm done, I'm always tempted to walk over and see how the park looks. Consequently, I've collected almost a dozen separate sets of Bryant Park photos, which you can see summarized here on Flickr. (At least one or two of those other sets will provide you with the historical details of the park; or you can look it up here on Wikipedia.)

In late April and early May of 2013, I took another stroll through the park, not having been there for nearly nine months -- but not because of a visit to the dentist, but because of another common excuse for being in this part of NYC: I was taking a photography class at the nearby International Center of Photography, and I had half an hour of spare time before my class began. It was still early spring summer, but the weather was mild, and the central lawn was green and completely empty, because the groundskeepers had roped it off to ensure the grass would finish growing before it gets trampled over by millions of visitors

I wandered mostly around the periphery of the park, looking for interesting scenes to capture with the Sony Alpha-65 and NEX-7 cameras that I happened to have with me. I locked the camera into a wide-angle setting and a fixed f/8 aperture, and I just pointed the camera in the general direction of an interesting scene, and pushed the shutter button. Of the few hundred shots that I took during these strolls, there were a handful that seemed worthy of uploading; that's what you'll be seeing in this set. All of this took roughly an hour, at the end of which I put away my camera, and wandered off to my class in the ICP building ...

Anyone can see this photo AttributionNoncommercialShare Alike Some rights reserved

Uploaded on May 17, 2013  |  Map

62 views / 1 favorite

(4,992 items)
Subscribe to a feed of stuff on this page... Subscribe to Ed Yourdon's photostream – Latest | geoFeed | KML