Toronto is a city that always seems to be under construction. I mean most cities have a few projects going on here or there but for Toronto, it seems to be its primary indusrtry! As I wandered up Yonge St., I found it difficult to make a photograph without construction equipment, scaffolding or construction barriers in it!
Old bank building on Yonge St. Note construction crane at top. |
Anyway I ended up going to Downtown Camera on Queen St.(my new favourite camera shop) where I purchased a few accessories for my new pseudo Leica and continued to roam about the downtown area taking pictures, poking about and just generally enjoying the day.
Look! A Toronto picture without construction equipment in it! Don't ever say I don't work hard for you folks! |
If you are doing street photography with a Leica, you have to do some black and whites. It's a Cartier-Bresson bylaw or something! |
On the train about to head home. Note that Union Station is under a state of PERPETUAL construction! |
Without Polariser |
With Polariser |
I know that nowadays you can reproduce the effect digitally in post processing, but I'm kind of old school. I like to get it right in camera. I cut my teeth shooting Kodachrome in a fully manual mechanical camera.
As I strolled further up the riverbank, I saw a beaver swimming about in the mill pond behind the dam. ( I know, the irony of seeing a beaver swimming near a man made dam is not lost on me either!) The Leica, for its many attributes, does not have a lens long enough for wildlife photography. I raced home (Or, more accurately, moseyed at a purposeful pace.) and got my Canon fitted with my longest zoom lens. By the time I got back there old Mr. Beaver had swum closer to the shore and I managed to get a few nice shots
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On the way home, I decided to do a little more wildlife photography. I snapped some pictures of the birds I encountered on the trail.
What struck me as I meandered home with my little clutch of digital treasures, was the contrast I had experienced within the space of twenty-four hours. Yesterday in Toronto I felt the frenetic pace of the city and, for the time that I was there, I enjoyed it. I guess that the old saying is true, that a change is as good as a rest. Today I enjoyed the absolute calm of a morning spent by the river within a five minute walk from my home. When I finish this post I will go downtown to pick up a few sundries of life.I will probably share a chat and a smile with people who know me by name or at least know who I am. And hopefully I will remind myself for the ten thousandth time how truly lucky I am. Be it ever so humble.... well, you know the rest.
...more later