#project365 [day 89] 115 Broadway

This is one my last doorways, and building entrances, from the visit to New York City. Located in Downtown Manhattan, a stone's throw from the Twin Towers complex, these twin Gothic Towers are a site that should be part of your itinerary. At this point they are known as the Trinity Centre, a managed office building, you can't really roam around freely, but I really liked the mood in this entrance. Also worth a visit to the Trinity Place Bar & Restaurant, which I hope to do next time.

#project365 [day 86] Manhattan Postcard

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This is one of the most photographed views of Lower Manhattan. I have seen inumerous versions of this view, and always wanted to know where it was taken from. And thankfully my wanderings through Brooklyn's shoreline got me to the right place. Unfortunately not at the best time, sunrise will reward you with the loveliest of light falling on the skyline, but at least I had some very interesting sky to help me out. The abandoned pillars make for an interesting foreground. Specially with long exposures which render the water with a velvety texture, which contrast with the well defined pillars. But I was there at midday, and without a Big Stopper to help me out, so the water looks very choppy. Whenever I get the chance to back to NYC, this is on my list to retake. It was taken at the end of the Brooklyn Bridge Park, and you may want to venture even closer to the water than me. 

-- Gear
Fujifilm X-PRO1
Fujifilm XF10-24mmF4 R OIS
MeFOTO Backpacker Tripod 
-- Post
Lightroom : Initial toning and final crop
Photoshop: Sharpening, colour blending and clean up
NikCollection Color Efex Pro 4: Toning and Detail extraction

#project365 [day 84] Down the corridor, at the NYPL

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This is my last image from the inside of the Stephen A. Schwarzian Building, the epicenter of the New York Public Library. I just loved the paneling work of the ceiling of this corridor, showing it proved a bit more complex than what I had expected. Shooting into a dark corridor that has a strong natural light source at the end is never simple. And this was one of the busiest corridors in the building, since at the end you could find the ladies washrooms. So I decided to point my lens more upward, and get the nice stone arch to frame the ceiling, and waited until there was only enough people in the scene to give it some idea of dimensions but not to become a distraction. And of course using exposure bracketing to get enough information in the shadows and highlights for post processing.

-- Gear
Fujifilm X-T1
Fujifilm XF18-135mmF3.5-5.6R LM OIS WR
-- Post
Lightroom : HDR photomerge, initial tone and final crop.
Photoshop: Perspective correction, clean up and sharpening.
NikCollection Color Efex Pro 4: Toning and Detail extraction.

#project365 [day 83] On the move, Grand Central Terminal

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Another one from the beautiful Grand Central Terminal in New York City. Where the main concourse is so finely detailed, even the passage to the tracks is a work of art. After you pass through this doorway though, and the industrial minimalism is king, This was another waiting game. Find a passage that had few distractions to create a nice frame, and wait until somebody gets to the position where it ties it all together.

-- Gear
Fujifilm X-T1
Fujifilm XF18-135mmF3.5-5.6R LM OIS WR
-- Post
Lightroom : Initial tone and final crop.
Photoshop: Perspective correction, clean up and sharpening.
NikCollection Color Efex Pro 4: Toning and Detail extraction.

#project365 [day 81] Upstairs, Downstairs at the NYPL

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Another product of my wanderings along the Stephen A. Schwarzian Building of the New York Public Library, in Midtown Manhattan. And another stairwell, but this building is full of lovely details it's hard to stop rising the camera and creating another image. When I stopped here, there was a lot of people going up and down the stairs. So I waited a while until I had the stairs completely empty, but felt that the image was too sterile. After a few more minutes I could get a single figure walking up on the opposite side, this gave the scene some scale and a bit of movement. This only lasted a few seconds, as more people followed him. Here we have some very tricky lighting to contend with. The artificial light coming from the chandeliers is not strong enough to light the whole scene, and the natural light is very strong at the window, but very faint everywhere else. So I used exposure bracketing to try and get as much of the scenes details exposed correctly and some very light HDR techniques in post-production.

-- Gear
Fujifilm X-T1
Fujifilm XF18-135mmF3.5-5.6R LM OIS WR
-- Post
Lightroom : HDR photomerge, initial tone and final crop.
Photoshop: Perspective correction, clean up and sharpening.
NikCollection Color Efex Pro 4: Toning and Detail extraction.