Hello! My name is Jodie. I live in Minnesota where the temps can fluxuate by 20 degrees in one day. Most of my photos have been taken very close to my home, a 10 acre hobby farm., where I raise Alpacas and chickens. I am a band director, a musician/singer and a photographer/adviser on the yearbook committee. My camera of choice is a Nikon. I have a D90 and a D70. I also have a SB800 flash and favorite lens is Nikon 18-200mm AF-S, with VR. Revisiting the visual arts is something I should have done years ago. If I see something remarkable, I just try to capture it. Nobody else will ever see it quite that way again so I hope you try that, too. This is just like expensive therapy for us. Thank you for visiting and may you have a peaceful day!
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F Number | f/11.0 |
---|---|
Make | NIKON CORPORATION |
Model | NIKON D70 |
Shutter Speed | 10/5000 |
Focal Length | 22 |
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Comments (9)
busi2ness
The outside is any time as impressive as the interior and even has a hint of the oriental. Ahhh, I am no connoisseur on architecture so let me just conclude by saying I love it and its depth is well captured from this POV.
lil_t
Very Impressive! Thank you for giving us all the angles!
MrsLubner
Its like some exotic royal palace! That's one heck of a shot. Amazing how it looks. Nothing like I would have thought.Fantastic capture.
fredster66
Looks fantastic. Very nice shot.
Danter
great photo
kenwas
Excellent shot. It is quite an impressive building.
goodoleboy
The flying flags? I've heard of flags flapping in the wind, but never flying, unless they're air cargo or painted on the side of an airplane. But I digress. That is a terrific panoramic shot of the stately old station, with its magnificent arches, columns, dome, fountain, statues, etc. All aboard!
mayuan
oh those American train stations, with their big arches and Romanesque cavern-y feeling, they were conceived as the great meeting grounds of all cultures! They feel so "old" now—since planes took over—but a ways back, they were grand. And you got them, you got their 'feel' and their rock-of-Gibraltar presence, all gray and rocklike like so many of our older institutional buildings. I like the wide angle and the slight curve of the lens; and I like that you got a big swath of green, showing the kind of vast expanse these monsters sit on. (One friend called it "institutional deserts". Well he could've been a little warmer!) Anyway, you got the right Washingtonian color: Bright clear sky, that institutional stone, and of course the flags. I love the comments too. (Flying flags! Hey, there's the buddhist tale: "Which is moving, the flag or the wind?" The answer: "Your mind.") Ok, thanks for this little series, I loved it. You do dialogue with buildings like you do with everything else, with real heart. Nice to walk in your eye & heart for a while...
junge1
Wonderful capture!