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Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts

Saturday, March 18, 2017

Road to New York




[Photos By: KPA]

There is a dominance of blue in the photographs (that's what happens with snow unless you correct for it). I don't have time to tweak them now, but I think it works, giving the impression of an icy blue wonderland outside.

The snow at times enveloped the countryside and we could barely make out the outlines of the trees and the farms. But it snowed throughout the trip - all 12 hours.

It was a beautiful trip. I left our safety to God, and to the skill and intelligence of the driver.

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Circles






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[Photos By: KPA]

Monday, June 15, 2015

The New York Dog

I browsed through the books at my local Chapters bookstore, and I found this: The New York Dog (not The Dogs of New York) by Rachael Hale McKenna, going for a mere $21 online ($32 in-store).

Here is one dog:


Bonga Loves New York

Image from: Rachael Hale McKenna: Photographer
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat

Friday, April 24, 2015

Frakturs, Fotografs, Farmicia, Francois, Flames and Fighting Songs

Here is the packed schedule I had in Philadelphia and New York. Visit these places, if you can...

I already posted on my visit to the Longwood Gardens (but further down in this post, I post a photograph which was on view from the Spring Blooms competition).

The New York Public Library
Exhibition: Over Here: WWI and the Fight for the American Mind





Let's All Be Americans Now
Lyrics and words by Irwin Berlin

[Verse 1]
Peace has always been our pray'r,
Now there's trouble in the air,
War is talked of ev'rywhere,
Still in God we trust;

Now that war's declared,
We'll show we're prepared,
And if fight we must.
It's up to you! What will you do?

[Chorus]
England or France may have your sympathy, over the sea,
But you'll agree That, now is the time, To fall in line,
You swore that you would so be true to your vow,
Let's all be Americans now. now.

[Verse 2]
Lincoln, Grant and Washington,
They were peaceful men, each one,
Still they took the sword and gun,
When real trouble came;
And I feel somehow, they are wond'ring now,
If we'll do the same.

[Repeat Chorus]

All this in the New York Public Library.

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Longwood Gardens
Photographic Exhibition: Spring Blooms
From the Delaware Photographic Society's annual Wilmington International Exhibition of Photography


Ellis Underkoffer

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Philadelphia Museum of Art
Exhibition: Drawn with Spirit: Pennsylvania German Fraktur from the Joan and Victor Johnson Collection


Pennsylvania German
Birth and Baptismal Certificate for Johannes Gass
1790-1800
Pen, ink and watercolor
12 3/4 x 15 1/2
Philadelphia Museum of Art


I got this postcard from the museum's shop. I couldn't find the exact piece on line, so what you see is my photograph (I don't have a scanner) of the postcard.

From what I can find out, the designer of this piece is known as Christian Beschler, the "Sussel Unicorn artist" according to this piece.
In 2007, Dr. Don Yoder identified the words gemacht von CB (made by CB) on two newly discovered "Sussel-Unicorn" taufscheine (birth and baptismal certificates).3 These initials belonged to the schoolmaster Christian Beschler,
[...]
His taufscheine are characterized by a bright orange or orange and yellow central rectangular area that contains the text adorned with compass stars and geometric designs. Whimsical unicorns and birds with manes eating berries, lions with faces, angels, hearts, half circles, compass stars, and pots of flowers fill the colorful documents. There seems to be an obsession to fill all available space. His religious text and drawing share these motifs.

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Farmicia
Food and Tonics


15 S. 3rd Street
(Between Market and Chestnut Streets)
Philadelphia



Here is the menu, but the lentil salad, with baked goat cheese, greens and sherry dressing is more than just a salad!

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The Red Flame Diner

67 West 44th St
New York, NY 10036



Good diner food for a fair price. Here's the menu.

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Plaza Hotel's Food Hall:
Francois Payard Patisserie








The Passion fruit (with a light chocolate) macaron, for $2.50, will take you down a few blocks.

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I didn't make it to the Morgan, the Cloisters, Macy's or Bergdorf Goodman. But, so far, it looks like New York will stand for a while.

Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Sunday, February 15, 2015

Glimpses of Light








Cut Glass
[Photos By: KPA]


I thought these look like interesting shapes of close-ups of cut glass on a doorway at the time I took the picture. But now they look to me like the archways of the interior of a cathedral, with bursts of light coming in from the windows, as though a presence has entered the building.

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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Church in Snow


Cristo Rei, Mississauga
[Photo By:KPA]

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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat

Monday, January 5, 2015

Clicking Through the Year


[Photo By: KPA]
(Probably my first photograph of 2015)


I keep meaning to write about my (relatively) new camera that I replaced this with, which I understand is no longer being manufactured. I tried to have it fixed, and was told that this Canon Camedia C-750 had been discontinued, and that I was better off getting a new one. I had that digital camera for about ten years, and it was perfect for my web-centered activities, where I could simply download the images onto my computer.

I bought my (now not so new) digital camera about a year ago, which I got for about 1/3 the price. The trick was that a "new" version was coming out, and the stores had to get rid of their "old" ones by dramatically reducing the price.

Here is the camera, and the complicated functions (I really do stick to a few that work for me. I have no time for experimentation as I am taking that elusive shot).
- Canon's powerful 30x Optical Zoom and 24mm Wide-Angle lens with Optical Image Stabilizer reduces camera shake so you achieve brilliant images whether you are up close or far away.
- 16.0 Megapixel sensor and Canon DIGIC 4 Image Processor deliver stunning quality images.
- Capture breathtaking 720p HD video in stereo sound with a dedicated movie button; zoom while shooting and play back videos on an HDTV via the HDMI output.
- Large 3.0-inch LCD with 461,000 dots enables easy viewing.
- Smart AUTO intelligently selects the proper settings for the camera based on 32 predefined shooting situations to ensure the best possible image capture for stills or video.
- Intelligent IS automatically chooses from six different modes to optimize image stabilization for shake-free images in a wide variety of conditions.
- Enhanced Zoom Framing Assist button aids in tracking and capturing subjects during super telephoto photography.
- High Speed AF greatly improves focus speed so you capture every shot with ease.
[More detailed information available at USACanon.com]
Here is more information, explained a little simpler:
The Canon PowerShot SX500 IS is a super-zoom bridge type camera that sports a 30x, 24mm wide-angle zoom, lens, 16 megapixel resolution, 3 inch LCD screen, 720p movies, full manual controls and a Digic 4 processor. Other standout features include a Smart Auto mode that detects 32 scenes, ISO 100-1600, Zoom Framing Assist, and a range of Creative Filters. [Source: Photography Blog]
I really only use a few of the camera's functions regularly, although I've worked through all of them.

What the Canon PowerShot SX500 IS looks like:





This camera is tiny. I have small hands, with small wrists, so heavy things are really not my choice. Some-one made this just perfect for my specifications.



My photography blog Kidist P. Asrat Photographs is older than my (new) camera, so the best place to see the photographs I've taken with the Canon Powershot SX 500 IS is at my photo blog: New York Reflections.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Saturday, December 27, 2014

Christ the King: Reclaiming Beauty


Cristo Rei Portuguese Catholic Church, in Mississauga
[Photo By: KPA]


This is what I saw, for a brief ten or fifteen minutes, outside my window this morning. I had just enough time to see it, decide to take a picture of it, and grab my camera. I even had to change some settings. And when ready to take the photograph, the SD (Secure Digital) card was not in place, so I had to grab it out of my laptop, and place it right-side into the camera! I would say this all took about 8-9 minutes. And the strip of light was still there, actually better than before. I took the shot in about 1 1/2 minutes. And about three minutes later, the strip of light had widened considerably, no longer clearly delineated. And a half hour later, the sky had become overcast.

I should add that this is how one reclaims beauty: To recognize its fleeting nature if left to the elements and our devices, and to find a way to make it permanent, either through art, or through daily searches (getting up early to see a sunrise, for example), and making it a part of our lives.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Monday, December 22, 2014

At the Art Gallery of Mississauga

There are some photographs scattered through the Mississauga City Hall. They are from the Art Gallery of Mississauga's permanent collection of Lynn Huntley-Wyczolkowski's work. It is a creative way to get people to see these pieces, and if you're like me, to look find out where they come from.

These are two (I think of three) that I found as I did my errands around the building.


Lynn Huntley-Wyczolkowski
Toast
Cibachrome photograph
51 x 41 cm
Collection of the Art Gallery of Mississauga
Donated by the artist, 2000



Lynn Huntley-Wyczolkowski
Minuet
2000


Dimensions and material are not available online for Minuet, and I didn't copy the information from the source, but Minuet looks similar in size and technique to Toast.

And from what I can figure out, Minuet is of a freesia flower.

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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Friday, December 5, 2014

A Chocolate Moment


[Photo By: KPA]

The Ferrero Rocher chocolate company is holding a competition it titles "Beauty is in the Details."

Contestants were given a scene in the mall, which included a table set with wine glasses and chocolates, and they were to take a picture of that scene, and submit it to a twitter site.

I happened to be there at the exact moment! Apparently they were there for only a couple of hours, after which they dismantled and left!

The competition guidelines are:
Do you see beauty in the details around you?

Find, capture and share your

#Ferreromoment

on Instagram and/or Twitter

For a chance to win 1 of 250

Ferroro Rocher Holiday Prizes
My "#Ferreromoment" is above, which I took a couple of days ago.

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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Saturday, November 22, 2014

The Acrtic in Mississauga


C-Cafe, in Mississauga, has displayed fifteen of George Hunter's photographs
(visible in the back of the room, by the window).


There was a retrospective on the life and work of Mississauga (native) photographer George Hunter on November 7 at C-Cafe, which for some reason I missed. That's too bad! I suppose I should be more in tune with online announcements (the information was here), rather than other ways of publicity. Although, to the credit of the cafe folk, they do leave behind upcoming programs at their front tables, but I must have missed this one.

The announcement for the exhibition has this biography:
Mississauga’s George Hunter’s remarkable images span seven decades and
create memorable impressions of people and places from across Canada and
more than 100 countries world-wide. Appointed to the Royal Canadian Academy
of the Arts in 1977 and widely published, his work includes photo spreads in
TIME Magazine and a major exhibit by the National Film Board of Canada. His
prints are found in permanent collections across Canada and locally in the Art
Gallery of Mississauga. Stories from a lifetime of photography and images from
Hunter’s iconic career will be shared with the cafe audience by two contemporary
artists, Tom Bochsler and Ken Clayton.
Fifteen of Hunter's photographs are now on display at C-Cafe. I took a photograph of a few images on display, but the one below was what caught my attention because of the drama of the train ploughing through the snow. I took a photograph of the photograph! Somehow I knew copies would be hard to find.


George Hunter (1921–10 April 2013)
Manitoba: Early Morning Salutations, Baker Lake
1946
51cm x 62cm


[This is a photograph I took of the display. It's not very good. I was too far away when I took it, and there was too much light reflecting on the glass. I will try another time.]

I showed the staff at the C-Cafe the photograph below, and joked a little.


Arctic in Mississauga
[Photo By: KPA]


"I can say that I got took this photo while on assignment in the Arctic!"

"Where did you take it?"

"Right out there, where the fountains usually are."

The very shallow pool has been converted into a skating rink, and this was before anyone had skated on it, and the zamboni didn't need to smooth it out. The scratches are probably from the Christmas tree and other things being dragged across the ice.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Thursday, October 9, 2014

Cathedral Forest

This is a post from October 2010, at Camera Lucida.



[Photos By: KPA]

Here are two almost identical shots of fall trees that I took in High Park, Toronto's largest park - which is more of a wood/forest - several years ago. I developed and printed them myself, and kept both as pieces with passing grades. It takes tens of trials to get the saturation and color level "just" right - often I have to come back another day in order to get a fresh perspective, and not continue printing without much of a difference.

I like the top photo because the "end" is clear - a burst of trees in focus with shimmering golden lights. The bottom one, in my view, shows a more elusive path. The trees in the back are slightly out of focus yet the glow of the light is more intense, which is what draws one further into the image.

In the top photograph, the path to the trees is less clear (not focused) while the bottom photograph has a clear path, also bathed with the light of the sun.

The photos were taken in late afternoon, when the light from the sun was muted.

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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Wednesday, August 20, 2014

A Corner for Reading


[Photo By: KPA]

Here is a corner, with the flowers nearby, that I've managed to get whenever I go for my early morning coffee at C Cafe.

We've been having storms, rain and wind. But, the patio remains open.
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Posted BY: Kidist P. Asrat
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Monday, July 14, 2014

25 West 81st (at Central Park West)

Below are photographs of a building on 81st street, just around the corner from the American Museum of Natural History, in New York.

As I got off the bus (M10), I thought I would take a look at some of the buildings around the museum, and settled on 25 West 81st Street.

It happens to be a landmark building. Here is some of its background:

Architects: Gronenberg & Leuchtag
Built (completed): 1927
Floors: 16
Designation: City Landmark

The building is across from the side entrance to the American Museum of Natural History. Despite the imposing design of the museum, I found its sprawling structure with a combination of architectural styles too confusing (compare it to the elegant Metropolitan Museum of Art).









[Photos By: KPA]
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Saturday, April 26, 2014

Daisies


Roadside Daisies
[Photo by KPA]



Daisies by the Falls
[Photo by KPA]


We are just beginning to see the beginnings of spring, and here are a couple of views we can look forward to. I took these photographs last May, 2013.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Art Thieves

No Title
Annie Macdonell
"The images in this series are scans of found 35mm slides. I came across a box of them next to the trash a few months ago. They were unlabeled, undated, and unsourced. I’ve put together a selection of 15, which now form a slideshow you can click through on your computer monitor. Maybe you will recognize some of the images. Others you may not recognize specifically, but you will certainly be familiar with their sources – art monographs, fashion magazines, notebooks and textbooks, technical manuals." [Annie MacDonell, Interview in Either/And] on her work Split Screen
MacDonell was a former classmate of mine at Ryerson University, where she received a BA in photography. She went on to get a Master of Fine Arts in Lefresnoy, a university in France. Here is more on her statement of her work Split Screen in Either/And:
The slides were produced on a copy stand which, before the flatbed scanner, was the simplest means of reproducing images. Each one contains an interruption of the image by the spine of the book in which it originally appeared. The visibility of the spine is what attracts me to them. It marks only one of the many transformations these images have undergone since they were produced by the original photographer or artist. But in doing so, it places the histories and genealogies of these images in the foreground. The slides were shot for pedagogical purposes, to be projected large in front of a classroom and discussed as a group. Before that, they were published in books and magazines, to be purchased and leafed through by individuals. And before that they were, perhaps, images matted and framed behind glass on a wall. Now we may be browsing effortlessly through them, each on our slick backlit monitors. But the spine’s interruption of the image reminds us of where they came from in the first place, and how our ways of encountering them continue to shift along with the technology that delivers them to us.
That is a lot of words for simply showing pictures from magazines which spread across two pages (split by the spine of the book).

Such is the verbose nature of contemporary "artists" who have a lot to say about their vapid works.

MacDonell's Master of Fine Arts thesis was "about representation itself, which has always seemed to me a more interesting conversation," as she explains in the Either/And interview.

What this means is that MacDonell, for all her "artistic" vision, is not an artist. When tested, she's probably not very skilled at any of these artistic fields either: Film making (taking out the camera, shooting images, editing those images, producing a coherent whole), painting, drawing, or sculpture (she's big on "installations" which to her probably constitutes sculpture). All her works are borrowed, which I term as stolen, from various sources. And of course, not from real artists, which would have given her some exposure, and eventually something to emulate, but from the photographs and films she finds in people's garbage bins.

What a macabre and nihilistic way to represent the world! And it shows in her disjointed, cut ups, collages and installations.

Art for this conceited individual is about talking about art, rather than making art. And these "found objects" have been her means of "conversation" rather than creation.

Below is a photograph I took about two years ago which is around a similar theme of displaying cultural and sexual messages through contemporary cultural signs. The original post, with my commentary is in Camera Lucida under The Sexy Escape.

The Sexy Escape, 2010
Kidist P. Asrat

Here is how I see the superiority of my work:
a. My photograph shows:
- Context
- Humanity - how ordinary people look next to these iconic images
- Architecture - how images are placed in or on buildings
- Real life - the images show ordinary people juxtaposed with the images, mannequins and shop windows
- Poetry - I try to reference these views to come up with some kind of visual poetry

b. Macdonell's images show:
- Disjointed images, shapes and forms: Her cut-off hands of the mannequin, her burlesque dancer revolving in a few frames of a film, have no connection to the real world, and rotate within the image's confines
- Focused on phallic: Almost all her work, at some point, narrows in on the male or female sexual organs
- Cut off from real life: Even though she says she finds these "objects" in people's trash, she isolates them from the owners, and creates her own, insulated world out of them
- Morbid: Her objects form a collection of "found" items which have been thrown away, and which had no use for their owners. She doesn't salvage them and bring them back to their original use (building a new mannequin to of the hand, for example), or elevate them by creating something worthwhile, but uses them to further degrade them.
- Nihilistic: She says in an interview: "The work becomes about representation itself, which has always seemed to me a more interesting conversation [than talking about the work]." The objects, the images, the sculptures no longer count, which means what they represent does not matter either.

Macdonell, and the string of "artists" of her era, are clever wordmongers. They have not talent in art, but somehow decided that they wanted to work in art. This proved difficult, and their way out is to "have conversations about representation," as they spitefully malign art and creation.

Here are links to Macdonell's works and interviews:

- Commentary on film installation Time is a One trick Pony.

- Cinema and Visual Pleasure at the 2006 Viennale

- Interview at the Mercer Union: Originality and the Avant Garde (on Art and Repetition)

- Grange Prize short-list interview

- Macdonell's website
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Friday, August 30, 2013

New York in a Week Part IV: Lake Cayuga

My long bus ride back to Toronto took longer than the ride to New York. For some reason, the bus went further upstate New York into Syracuse, and later Ithaca. We passed some Finger Lakes, and I was able to identify two (from the road signs): Lake Cayuga and Seneca Lake.

The bus traveled all along Lake Cayuga, which at first I thought was a river, but I soon realized, thanks to my tablet computer (people on the bus were unable to help), that it was Lake Cayuga. The bus drove by the top section of Seneca Lake, and which we saw for a much shorter duration.

Here is a shot I managed to take of Lake Cayuga:



And below is the route (or routes) the bus took to the final destination in Canada. The whole ride took about thirteen hours (the bus was an hour late in arriving), and I think part of that length was due to the ride into northern New York state.









This is the final installment of my trip to New York City.
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Bubblegum and Diamonds: Birks Summer Showcase

Below are photos I took of Birk's jewellery store, in a mall, amidst the impersonal chain-stores. Birks is a chain itself, with its head office based in Motreal. I asked the shop assistant what the round pieces were. "Bubblegum." "Really!?" I then asked him who designs the windows. "Head Office sends us a blueprint for the design. We follow that," he replied. So all Birks' stores look alike.

Still, the idea is quaint, and the effect is lovely, with several window niches showcasing their own variations of bubblegum and diamonds.


Birks on Twitter, Facebook and Apps?


Marco Bicego Jewellery
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Every Day, I Search for Beautiful Things


Claude Monet (1840–1926)
Title: Reflections of Clouds on the Water-Lily Pond
Date: c.1920
Medium: Oil on canvas
Dimensions: 78.7 × 502.4 in
Location: Museum of Modern Art, New York City


A reader (Bob) posted this quote by the impressionist artist Claude Monet on my post To the Waterfront:
Every day I discover more and more beautiful things. It’s enough to drive one mad. I have such a desire to do everything, my head is bursting with it.
Bob wrote:
Marvellous, reminds me of Monet's "Everyday I see more and more beautiful things"
Thank you!
This is a wonderful compliment.

But I would change the quote a little to describe my own particular activities:
Every day I search for beautiful things.
In these days of the disappearance of beauty from our daily lives, beauty has gone into hiding (or has been swept aside in some corner). So rather than discovering beauty we have to search for it, hidden in museums, books, the still-standing architecture, classic films, gardens. I have provided a long list (fortunately, the list is still long) of places we can get started with this quest.

But, Bob's remark is a great compliment. I think that through my personal approach, I can be sincere in my quest, which is at times simple, at other times a great pleasure, and sometimes a difficult burden.

Lawrence Auster said something similar in an email to me. He wrote to me in mid-January (2013):
"There is something appealing about your semi flow-of-associations writing. Not everything needs to be big and important. What you provide is a feeling of your life, of yourself."
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Posted By: Kidist P. Asrat
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Saturday, July 27, 2013

To the Waterfront!

A couple of days ago, I walked several blocks down Yonge Street to get to the waterfront, or to Harbourfront, as it is known in Toronto. I took my camera, since it was a beautiful, sunny summer's day, and I was sure I would find somethings to capture along the way.

Here is my route, in pictures:




Black-eyed Susans behind The Royal York Hotel


The Royal York Hotel
Built in 1929 by architects Ross and MacDonald



Detail of the Royal York Hotel facade
On the Front Street entrance
Across from Union Station



Interior of Union Station, archway with lamp


The Guastavino tiles of Union Station's ceiling


Maple Leaf Chair in the Harbourfront Centre


Tugboat on Lake Ontario
I was sitting on a bench in front of the lake, eating a sandwich for lunch, and watching the tugboats on the lake. A large seagull waddled up before me, wanting a share of my vittles. I shooed it away. No effect. It was a bold, and emboldened, creature. I ignored it and the intruder left on its own will.

I continued to watch the tugboats maneuvering on the lake.
[All Photos By: Kidist P. Asrat]


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