Autumn in London

Leaving Paris was not easy, but I returned to a dazzling London full of beautiful Autumn weather.  Crisp, cool days, clear skies, and leaves starting to turn golden hues every where you looked.  Hyde Park is just a short stroll from my Notting Hill flat, so I was able to make the most of the weather with daily strolls along its many paths and on a particularly lovely Sunday, I organized a picnic on Hampstead Heath with my friend Scott - a perfect way to get readjusted to London living. IMG_1616

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I am within the two month mark of the time I have left on this leg of my adventure, and I cannot believe how quickly it has gone.  As much as I have loved it, I am also a bit ready to return to my little house in Washington (despite how crazy it seems there these days!), my friends and family, and of course, my pup.  That said, I still have a few more excursions planned and a few visitors in the queue!   I am looking forward to having two fellow lovers of London visit in the next few weeks and rediscovering this city with them!

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All text and images copyright © 2013, Capital Citizenne.  All Rights Reserved.

Rooftops of Paris

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Mine was the twilight and the morning. Mine was a world of rooftops and love songs. -Roman Payne

On my first night in Paris, I went to a Meet Up for photographers, and just having a bar full of people to talk to (mercifully, in english), made for a warm welcome to a new city.  So it was fitting that on one of my last nights in this beautiful city, I attended another Meet Up with the same group.  This time, instead of chatting over wine, we took our cameras up to the top of Printemps department store to photograph Paris from an entirely new (at least for me) angle.

At one point, just as the lights on the Eiffel Tower were starting to warm up, I smiled a huge smile as I soaked in the moment, something I find myself doing with great frequency lately.  This month in Paris has been incredible and one I will always remember.

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All text and images copyright © 2013, Capital Citizenne.  All Rights Reserved.

Can I take your picture?

A portrait photographer depends upon another person to complete his picture. The subject imagined, which in a sense is me, must be discovered in someone else willing to take part in a fiction he cannot possibly know about. - Richard Avedon

I spent the week before our adventure to Scotland back at LSP studying Portrait Photography.  In a way, it was sort of a combination of what I learned in Studio Lighting and Photojournalism, with a lot of new tricks up its sleeve.

This was my fourth course at LSP, meaning I have been making the journey from SW10 to Soho for over a month now, and faces that have become familiar have also become friends.  It is comforting to walk through those doors and step into the lift up to the sixth floor (which is really the seventh to us from the states) and know that I will likely bump into a former instructor, ready with a hug and a smile, or a classmate, excited to see that we will be taking another course together.  It is very strange that I will be starting my last day time class there tomorrow.  It has been a wonderful anchor on the first part of my adventure.

So, armed with the confidence of knowing my way around as well as more than a few of my fellow photo-enthusiasts, I stepped into the class I was most looking forward to, Portrait Photography.  I love taking portraits, I love showing someone the photo I just took of them (even though it is kind of a no-no to let the sitter see the back of your camera) and watching their eyes light up and the expression on their face that says "oh, wow, I don't look half bad."  The problem is, most people I know (myself included!) do not like having their picture taken!  Thank goodness for dogs and babies...and, apparently, sea birds (Pelicans, I'm looking at you, hams, every last one of you).

Once again, as with Studio Lighting, I had the dreaded realization that, if I was going to be practicing on my classmates, they were going to be practicing on me.  Cue hair and make-up (lets just say I'd let that slip a bit during my photojournalism week, when I was also rather ill).  Did I mention London was having a heat wave?  I know most of the States is burning up with heat indexes in DC over 100, and it was "only" in the 90s here (I'm starting to get the hang of the celsius to fahrenheit conversion), but there is a serious lack of Air Conditioning here.  Not just in my flat, where, blessedly, it stays relatively cool thanks to being a basement level and it came equipped with a large oscillating fan (which were apparently in very short supply), but many a restaurant and, even, at times, our classroom (remember folks, its on the 7th floor, heat rises...it was uncomfortable).  So needless to say, the test portraits of me are not what I'd call "keepers."

My classmate and frequent assignment partner, Alice, was a different story and some of our shoots turned out quite well.  Thank you Alice for being such a lovely and fun subject!

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One of our assignments was to take 36 portraits of the same subject.  In a row.  36.  We were encouraged to approach a stranger but were perfectly welcome to use a friend or family member as our subject.  While I am getting a bit bolder, I still decided to go with the friend option, knowing that I was meeting my friend Scott that evening for a pub quiz (our team of "Yanks" came in third, not too shabby considering there was more than one question about cricket...).  As luck would have it, he brought along a co-worker, Ella, who was willing to let me snap-snap-snap away, technically fulfilling the assignment with both a stranger and a friend (Scott thought he was off the hook, ha!).  Here's a very small sample:

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It is a very good thing that I came through with some clutch answers during the quiz, because having someone constantly snapping pictures of you is incredibly annoying.  But the point of this type of assignment (yes, there's a point or two) is that often if you are commissioned to take a portrait, you will not have much time with the subject, you likely won't know the subject personally (and again, not much time to build a connection or rapport), and you may not have much control over the environment.  And also to illustrate (again!) that if you walk away with one great shot out of 36, you have done your job well.  Thank you Ella and Scott!

Building on that, our final assignment for this course was to spend two hours with a model on Friday morning, trying to capture a number of emotions: anxiety, happiness, dreaming, in love, sadness, shattered (which means exhausted here), disappointed, surprised, furious.  If you take  gander at stock images and use any of these as key words, you will get a lot of lovely but somewhat cheesy photos.  Our goal was to capture these images without being too obvious (ie, a really wide eyed, mouth agape with hands on either side to show "surprised").  It just so happened that my darling mom arrived on Thursday (if you missed how that happened, in the span of four days, give this post a read), and my instructor suggested that she be my model - after telling her that my mom does not particularly like having her photo taken she answered, even better!

Once my mom realized, to her slight horror, that this would be a bit more involved than me snapping nine photos of her making faces that she thought corresponded to the emotions, she settled in for a grueling morning of having her picture taken over and over and over again.  I promised her I wouldn't put too many up, so here are a few of our favorites.

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After a week off spent traveling around the UK with my model momma, I head back to Oxford Street tomorrow for my last full-time class, Food & Product.  After that I have a couple of evening courses, but it is winding down.  I've fallen back in love with photography over the last six weeks - taking photos, analyzing, enjoying them - and rarely leave my flat without my camera (friends and family: you've been warned).  [Santa, if you're reading this, I've been pretty good this year, and a 5D Mark III would look lovely under the tree...!]

For any of my former Alliance colleagues who are reading the blog, I took all of these with the 50mm lens I bought using your sweet going away gift (a gift card to B&H, they know me well!).

A (sick) Day in the Life

I spent this week out on the streets of Soho and the South Bank practicing street photography and photojournalism.  It was a great class, and one that I was really looking forward to, but just as I was surprised by how much I enjoyed working in the studio last week, I was equally surprised by how anxious I was trying to take stealth street photographs! I did get a few interesting shots in Soho (always a hotbed of interesting people and scenes!) on the first day of class, and found myself getting a bit more comfortable with it as the week progressed.

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On Wednesdays, we have the day off from class to do an assignment on our own.  This week, our assignment was to document our day in a photo essay, applying the basic structural elements we studied, like establishing shots, detail shots, relationship and portrait shots, while turning the camera on ourself.  I went to bed Tuesday unclear about what my day would look like, but woke up with the horrible realization it was not going to look like much because I was sick.  As in fever, sore throat, can't believe I have to get out of bed and go to Boots (the pharmacy), oh-dear-me I wore sweatpants in London, sick.  I'd like to blame it entirely on some germs picked up on the Tube, but it's probably a combination of public transport, not enough vitamins/exercise and possibly a dose of too much fun.  Needless to say, my photo essay was pretty boring...

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I managed to make it to class Thursday and Friday despite the bug, and we ended the class with a field trip to Borough Market. Since I already managed to take loads of foodie photos there in June, this time I focused on "street portraits" of the vendors.  One thing that I have learned through this whole course is that if you spend a whole day shooting and you come away with one or two shots you really like, it was a successful day.  For as instantaneous as digital photography is, it requires an incredible amount of patience!  Thankfully, a market like Borough gives you plenty of good excuses to chat with the vendors and ask if they wouldn't mind you poking around with your camera.  Some people posed, others went right about with their work as if I wasn't there.

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After being out and about so much with class, I am firmly rooted in the flat today in an effort to kick this bug once and for all.  Thankfully, I kept my Netflix streaming account active, have plenty of tea and honey, and despite the actual heat wave that has hit London (it's nearly 90 today, though they have been calling it a heatwave once the temps reached 80...) my little garden flat is relatively cool.  I feel confident that I will be in fine form to celebrate Bastille Day tomorrow and take on Portraiture on Monday!

Tasting London

For quite a long time, London's food scene got a bad rap, but times have certainly changed.  London -- not unlike D.C. -- is buzzing with fabulous restaurants popping up all over the city.  Today, I ventured to Regent's Park to sample offerings from 40 of the city's best restaurants, in addition to a number of specialty food producers, at the annual Taste of London. Not knowing exactly where to start, I started at the most logical of locations, the "world of beer" where I purchased a pint of ale and studied the program and map, plotting my course.  Of course, I changed my mind a million times once I was actually face to face with the food, settling on a delicious risotto, a trio of seafood sliders and a spicy ox cheek doughnut.  As you can see, I also used the day to practice some of the photography techniques and lessons I learned last week -- taking photos in manual mode takes some patience and some getting used to, but I am enjoying it!

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Acquerello risotto with 8 year-aged organic parmesan from Babbo

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A trio of seafood sliders from The Angler

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Spicy ox cheek doughnut with apricot jam from the Duck and Waffle

Everything I tried was delicious, and I would have eaten more but I ran out of "Crowns" (the currency of Taste) at the same time I ran out of room in my stomach, though I also sampled a bite of black pudding as well as some delicious English cheeses that made their way back to my flat!

Tomorrow, I am planning to set my alarm clock for the wee hours of the morning in hopes of joining fellow tennis fans in The Queue at Wimbledon (wish me luck, apparently all of tomorrow's show court tickets have already been accounted for by fans camping out since early this morning!)