Categories
Landscape Small town

Monday October 18, 2010

BRONX NEW YORK – Last weekend we caught an independent film, City Island, on pay-per-view, so I thought that I should drive out to City Island to find out what’s really going on there. Wikipedia entry on City Island.

According to Wikipedia “City Island is an urbanized area, reminiscent of a small New England town.” Actually I found it more reminiscent of Bushwick than Nantucket. Sort of a Bushwick-by-the-Sea. That may not be a bad thing because according to a recent Gawker article Bushwick (which is in Brooklyn) is the new center of cool.

City Island was really, really quiet – almost deserted. Bars were empty; there was no one on the street; most businesses were closed; but there were no parking signs everywhere, suggesting that the island gets crowded in the summer. The light was poor for photography. I’ll go back on a better day in season. There may be a project here. Here’s a house tricked up for Halloween. (On the Halloween theme, City Island has a spooky neighbor, Hart Island – visually a slightly sinister low silhouette to the east of City Island. It’s the site of New York’s potters field. Wikipedia entry on Hart Island) Taken with my Leica M9 and a 28mm Summicron lens.

City Island

Here’s another one – same camera and lens but stitched from three frames.

City Island Fish Market

On this date one year ago: October 18, 2009

Office
Categories
Landscape Religion Small town

Sunday October 3, 2010

SOUTH BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT – This is the Methodist Church in South Britain, Connecticut. The center of this village has been designated a historic site, which may explain why this derelict structure hasn’t been torn down.

Hasselblad H3D-39 and HC 35-90 lens.

Methodist Church South Britain Connecticut

 

Categories
Landscape Small town

Saturday October 2, 2010

NEW MILFORD CONNECTICUT – This is the First Congregational Church in New Milford. It was founded in 1716; construction on the first meeting house was started in 1719 and was finished in 1731 (construction delays were evidently as common then as they are now); Construction of the present building commenced in 1831, and was completed in 1833. The lovely Greek revival facade was typical of the era.  Taken with a Hasselblad H3d-39 and a 35-90mm zoom lens.

First Congregational Church New Milford, CT

 

Categories
Landscape Small town

Sunday September 12, 2010

NEW MILFORD, CONNECTICUT – Many of the buildings on the green in New Milford are draped in bunting this weekend, commemorating the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center. The light, high sky didn’t make for great photography.

Cramer and Anderson, law firm, New Milford

Leica M9 with 35mm Summicron pre-ASPH v.IV. Three frames stitched.

Categories
Landscape Small town

Saturday July 10, 2010

ANCRAMDALE, NEW YORK – We drove over to Columbia County in New York for dinner with some friends. Here is the Ancramdale Presbyterian Church. It’s a bit odd with the steeple lacking the actual steeple. The town history says that the church was built in 1847 but there are no other details. Ancram history.

Tidbits from the town website: “The name was derived from the Livingston homestead in Anchoram, Scotland. Robert Livingston, first Lord of the Manor was the son of a Scotch clergyman, born in Anchoram, Scotland in 1654. The town comprises 27,000 of the total 160,000 acres the Livingston family had held from the initial grant by the English Crown in 1686. Philip Livingston, grandson of Robert, founded the first iron works in 1743, the only one of its kind on the banks of the Roeliff Jansen Kill and in the NY Colony.”

Ancramdale Presbyterian Church

Hasselblad H3d 39.

Categories
Landscape Small town

Monday July 5, 2010

NEW MILFORD, CONNECTICUT – I decided to drive back to New York early. The light in New Milford was interesting so I stopped to photograph. One of the grandest buildings on the green of this slightly troubled town is the Lillis Funeral Home. Here’s a link to the iMortuary entry for Lillis: Lillis Funeral Home.

The Lillis’s are evidently a prominent New Milford family.  A Google search identifies a Deputy Chief of Police named Lillis; the town has a Lillis Road; the school board was housed in the Lillis Building which is now apparently abandoned.

I’m going to go out of my way to collect mortuaries over the next few months.

Lillis Funeral Home

Hssselblad H3d 39 with 35-90mm lens.

Categories
Landscape Religion Small town

Monday May 31, 2010

NEW PRESTON, CONNECTICUT – There are two Congregational Church buildings in New Preston.  For most of the year the congregation meets in a lovely classical New England structure on a hill near the center of the village, which I photographed at sunrise on November 7, 2009.  Here’s a link: New Preston Church During the summer months the congregation meets in a stone building a few miles away.

New Preston Stone Church

Taken with a Leica M9 and 35mm Summicron Asph. lens. Three frames stitched with Autopano Pro. Perspective touched up in Photoshop.

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