Saturday, January 23, 2021

Weekly Shooting Excursion XV: Little Village…North Lawndale…Bohemian California?

My fifteenth summer ‘keep me sane’ outing was a really interesting and enjoyable photo shoot. I decided to shoot along Cermak Rd. (22nd St) west of Western Avenue, in what I assumed was Chicago's Little Village neighborhood. I had really enjoyed shooting along 26th St. in Little Village earlier in the summer, and was expecting something similar shooting a few blocks to the northeast. While there were some similarities, there were also some big differences. The first difference was the actual neighborhood where I was  shooting. I thought I was in the northeast corner of Little Village, just west of Pilsen. Looking on Google maps, it showed the area as being part of Little Village. Looking in Wikipedia, however, I read that Cermak west of Western was actually in North Lawndale, the neighborhood directly north of Little Village. North Lawndale is more a struggling neighborhood than Little Village, and doesn’t have the buzzy street vibe that Little Village has. To further complicate things, when uploading photos from this shoot to my Flickr account, it labeled most of them as being in ‘Bohemian California’. Flickr comes up with a lot of odd neighborhood names (so does Google Maps),  but I Googled ‘Bohemian California’ and found that the area was informally called that in the past, as it was once an area with many Czech immigrants (that also explains why nearby Pilsen, now a largely Mexican neighborhood, also has a Czech name).


The other big difference was in the feel of the area. While 26th St. just a few blocks south and west of where I was shooting is a busy street full of small businesses and shops mainly catering to the large Mexican population in the neighborhood, Cermak Rd. in this area is much quieter. There were quite a few businesses, but also a lot of closed storefronts, and there was considerably less pedestrian and vehicle traffic. It’s more run down than 26th St., and the farther west I walked, the grubbier the neighborhood felt. The street eventually became a couple block stretch of auto repair shops and weed filled lots before ducking under railroad tracks and continuing as a residential area.

Regardless of the name and the feel of the neighborhood, I found the area very photogenic, and shot a lot of photos. Urban areas always attract me when shooting, and the somewhat gritty feel of the area was easy and fun to shoot. 


This shoot was also the last time I used my Nishika camera, a cheap plastic 4-lens camera made in the late ’80's to produce lenticular photos. I had my Nishika loaded with old, expired film, and was shooting photos, when it jammed while trying to advance the film. I tried again, and the entire film advance mechanism broke. I was a little disappointed. While it’s a cheap crappy camera I bought at a garage sale, I had rediscovered it this summer after not using it much for ten years or so, and was particularly enjoying shooting panoramic or mosaic scenes with it and joining those images in Photoshop. I may try taking the camera apart to see if I can get it to work again, but as it’s a cheap plastic camera, I’m doubtful that will be successful. Replacing it isn’t going to happen either, as crappy camera enthusiasts have discovered the Nishika. The camera I paid $2.00 for now sells for over $100 on Ebay, and it definitely isn’t worth nearly that much! Along with my favorites shot with my real camera, I’ve added a couple of the final photos made with the Nishika to the end of this post.

 





















Made with my now broken Nishika camera.

The last photo shot with my crappy old 4-lens Nishika camera. The double exposure is from the camera jamming and exposing twice on the same piece of film.

Monday, January 4, 2021

Weekly Shooting Excursion XIV: Oak Forest

I’m quite a ways behind in writing about my weekly summer shooting excursions. The photos in this post were actually shot in mid-August. These things happen when you work full time. I’m just grateful that I have a job right now. These photos were shot in Oak Forest, a suburb south of Chicago. This was one of those ‘combine a photo shoot with an errand’ outings that also comprised a couple of earlier shoots. My car was due for a biennial emissions check, and the closest facility to where I live is out in the middle of nowhere. I took a look on Google Maps, looking for anything that might be a little photogenic, and found that Oak Forest, a suburb just a few minute’s drive from the emissions testing facility, has a small, kind of downtownish looking area. So, I headed there.


As is often the case when I find myself shooting in the suburbs, I didn’t seem to engage as fully with the landscape as I do when shooting in the city. There was a bit of an interesting twist to this shoot, however. A few days before I shot these photos, a derecho, which is a very severe and long-lasting storm, blew through the Chicago area. It was very severe-about half a block from my house, a huge tree blew over in a neighbor’s yard, and came to rest on electrical wires. Cleanup crews were so overworked that it was several days before it was removed-I’m surprised we never lost power. Oak Forest was in the middle of cleanup when I was there. Electrical and tree removal crews were working in several locations, and I saw a few storefronts that had sustained damage. I was actually asked three times if I was “the guy from the insurance company” when I was shooting photos of buildings. With all the cleanup, there were people out, but not enough to worry about social distancing.

My car passed the emissions test, by the way.


Here are my favorites from this shoot.

























 

Friday, January 1, 2021

Favorite Photo 2020

Miss You More
Digital Photo, 2020

Every New Year's Day, Lenscratch, one of the best photo blogs I've seen, publishes reader submissions of their favorite photos taken over the previous year. This year's post is huge, eleven pages full of reader submissions of all types of photos from all types of photographers. They are loosely arranged thematically across the eleven pages.
The photo I submitted is the one above. It's one of those photos that I knew was probably a winner when I posted it. It was shot on Memorial Day weekend, on the first of the weekly shooting excursions I made this summer. You'll find it on page 7 on the Lenscratch favorite photos post.