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Photography F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 01 10:53 pm)
These are beautiful....I'm curious about the columns...they've been there for 20 years...? Just sitting there? Do you know what the reasoning was for that?
I am, therefore I create.......
--- michelleamarante.com
Thanks folks. Michelle, as for the reason for the columns. The short answer is, well.just because. Personally I think the reason is has to do with the fact that around hear if you have a large open grassy area, someone has to put something on it. Such as a shopping mall, town house, or monument.
The truth of the matter goes like this. (Hope I get this right, the web site seems to be down at the moment.) These columns were part of the US Capital Building from around 1826 to 1956. About that time they put a new dome on the Capital, and the design gave the illusion that the dome was to big to be adequately supported. So to fix the illusion, they had to remove these columns, from the east side, to build whatever they built, so the dome wouldnt look as if it were going to fall. So now we jump to the 80s, some big shot landscaper took a trip out to the National Arboretum and seen this 20 acre stretch of grass and thought it needed something on it, and thought that the unused columns would go well at the top of the hill. He died a few months later, and they put the columns up.
So thats the story, as best as I can remember, but this is the URL to the page talking about the Capitol Columns http://www.usna.usda.gov/Gardens/collections/columns.html I suppose they will have it back up eventually.
Quinn
Yeah I'd like to get a better view too...maybe once the site is back up... I would think the columns would be put to better use actually supporting some sort of architecture?
I am, therefore I create.......
--- michelleamarante.com
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Attached Link: http://www.usna.usda.gov/index.html
Ok got the film back and scanned in. The location is the National Arboretum in Washington DC. I have been wanting to make it out there for several years, and last Saturday I finally made itThe Tools:
Nikon N90s
105mm (prime) manual focus Macro lens
Kodak Supra 100 film