You aren't signed in     Sign In    Help

I wish I hadn't said all those terrible things to my boyfriend ... now he's unfriended me on Facebook, blocked me on Twitter, and he puts my phone calls straight through to voice-mail...

I wish I hadn't said all those terrible things to my boyfriend ... now he's unfriended me on Facebook, blocked me on Twitter, and he puts my phone calls straight through to voice-mail... by Ed Yourdon.
The streets were wet when I got up a few days ago, and the weather forecast called for rain throughout the day. Consequently, I decided to spend my half-hour of daily "photography time," during my lunch-break, down in the subway station, where I knew I could stay dry. Since I had a mid-afternoon appointment on 72nd Street, I decided that instead of photographing at my own local subway stop, I would take the train downtown and hunker down in a quiet corner to see what came my way. I found a quiet bench on the downtown side of the 72nd Street IRT line, and sat patiently to see what would happen across the tracks, on the uptown side... Later in the afternoon, when it was time to head back home, I spent half an hour sitting on the uptown side of the tracks, waiting to see how people were behaving across the way...

As is often the case, I got a consistent sense of solitude, isolation, wistfulness and even loneliness on the part of the subway riders I was observing; maybe the gloomy weather up above made them all pensive, or maybe that's the way they always are, when alone in the subway. Whatever the reason, there were only one or two cases where I saw people laughing, smiling, or chatting cheerfully with one another.

As with the last subway group that I shot at ISO 6400, there's a little bit of noise/graininess in these images -- but I decided to leave them that way. I did adjust the "hot spots" (areas over-exposed from the fluorescent lighting in the subway station) and "cold spots" (shadows and dark areas), and punched up the color a little bit. But aside from that, this is yet another view of the typical daytime scene on a typical NYC subway line...

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

Over the years, I've seen various photos of the NYC subway "scene," usually in black-and-white format. But during a recent class on street photography at the NYC International Center of Photography (ICP), I saw lots and lots of terrific subway shots taken by my fellow classmates ... so I was inspired to start taking a few myself.

So far, I'm taking photos in color; I don't feel any need to make the scene look darker and grimier than it already is. To avoid disruption, and to avoid drawing attention to myself, I'm not using flash shots; but because of the relatively low level of lighting, I'm generally using an ISO setting of 800 or 1600 -- except for my most recent photos with my new Nikon D700, which are all shot at ISO 6400.

I may eventually use a small "pocket" digital camera, but the initial photos have been taken with my somewhat large, bulky Nikon D700 DSLR. If I'm photographing people on the other side of the tracks in a subway station, there's no problem holding up the camera, composing the shot, and taking it in full view of everyone -- indeed, hardly anyone pays attention to what's going on across the tracks, and most people are lost in their own little world, reading a book or listening to music. But if I'm taking photos inside a subway car, I normally set the camera lens to a wide angle (18mm) setting, point it in the general direction of the subject(s), and shoot without framing or composing.

So far it seems to be working ... we'll see how it goes... 

Comments

view profile

tatadbb  Pro User  says:

this is a so emotive portrait; awesome moment Ed :)
Posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )

view profile

Ed Yourdon  Pro User  says:

Thanks!

It's amazing to see the looks on people's faces, as they sit by themselves in the subway station. I wonder if they realize how sad and lonely they look...
Posted 2 weeks ago. ( permalink )

view profile

kamihacker  Pro User  says:

most people don't realize how sad (or tense in my case) they look when they are out in the street on their own

I have seen many sad faces in public transportation and I often wonder, "is their life really as sad as their expression right now?"

it's a pointless question, but it bugs me for a while, just because I am curious about most things
Posted 7 days ago. ( permalink )

view profile

Ed Yourdon  Pro User  says:

My experience, here in NYC, is that people usually have a happier expression on their face when they are outside, on the streets. They are often talking to someone else, and in any case, they know they are in the "public", and visible to many other people. And I think they enjoy the sunshine and fresh air, etc.

When they are down below the surface of the street, in a noisy subway station, they are far more likely to be alone, and to ignore the presence of other people. They seem to be thinking very seriously about something, and the look on their face is sometimes sad, sometimes pensive, sometimes dreamy. And I don't think it occurs to them what they look like; I think man of these people would be amazed if they saw their own pictures...
Posted 6 days ago. ( permalink )

Would you like to comment?

Sign up for a free account, or sign in (if you're already a member).

[?]
view photos Uploaded on November 7, 2009
by Ed Yourdon

Ed Yourdon's photostream

14,259
uploads

This photo also belongs to:

NYC subways, 2009 (Set)

184
items

Tags

Additional Information

AttributionShare Alike Some rights reserved Anyone can see this photo

Add to your map
Anyone will be able to see this on the map
 (edit)