Showing posts with label blackbird fly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blackbird fly. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Sunday, April 05, 2009

ohshit



no i don't know why i have a thing for pink cameras, i just do.

image from here and i think 8storeytree might be carrying this soon.

Monday, February 16, 2009

135BC x BBF

NOT that you can actually tell at all.



I'd gone 18 highly uninspired shots on the Holga before I suddenly got very annoyed because I knew the pictures were crap. So I just haphazardly finished up the roll and then ran it through the BBF again. My rationale was that there may be beauty in chaos but rubbish would just be rubbish.

Well. I don't know what happened. Perhaps the Holga felt slighted. But man, that camera is seriously temperamental and just so awfully prone to underexposure I feel like smacking it sometimes.

So here's what came out of it.




I liked hanging on those things as a kid too. But that's an uncle btw.



These are seriously scary payground toys. Can you see just how menacing they are?



I like to take pictures of the sun.



There's been a lot of dead plants and leaves around. Trees are shedding like crazy.



I didn't managed to capture the feeling. But sometimes, when I cycle along this path, if I pretend hard enough, I can feel as though I'm riding along a tree-lined walkway in a cold climate.



I've always liked cranes. As a kid I'd liken them to animals. I still do. Giraffes usually get the brunt of it. I mean, that's only logical. The alternative would be dinosaurs, I guess.



I've a tonne more photos to upload. Maybe later.

Friday, February 13, 2009

Don't take colour away from me

I don't like black and white photography very much. After 50 over rolls of colour, I decided maybe I should give it a shot to prove myself right (or wrong). Lucky 100 is pretty cheap anyway.

Well. It might the combination of the film and the Blackbird Fly and the fact that it's my first time using B&W. The results were pretty lacklustre. Because the lack of contrast is so severe, the normal shots are not much to look at and I ended up liking the super blurry double exposures the most.








Don't think I'll try again. Saturated colour, I want you back.

Sunday, January 04, 2009

Tokyo Love Affair #8

The day we went to Odaiba was the first day of fine weather we had in Tokyo, and it was an amazingly beautiful day. There were all these little puffs of clouds dotting a very blue sky and the colours of everything looked fantastic.

Odaiba is a rather futuristic looking place. Lots of spheres and long, sharp objects piercing into the sky. I saw two or three twin tower buildings in the area while gaps in buildings also seem to be a very poular design feature there. The combination of blue sky, gorgeous natural light, glinting metal and space age-esque structures made me think Odaiba on that day could easily be the set of a love story taking place light years ahead.



The above is the Fuji TV Building, which is just one of the several architectural structures you will see mentioned in Odaiba guides such as this one. Other cool buildings that I did not go to include the Telecom Center and the Tokyo Big Sight.

But my main aim in visiting Odaiba is the ferris wheel at Palette Town.


Took a clear cabin which was all see-through and actually, it was kind of nerve-wrecking. I don't think I do very well with heights but it was really cool up there (even when the wheel stopped when we were right on the top and when the cabin started swaying in the wind...) because it's just so pretty all around.

I clutched the handle bar with one hand the whole time while the other hand held on to a camera. The Ferris Wheel is 115 metres tall and one of the highest in the world. It is also magnificently adorable because all the cabin colours are so pretty. Yes, I love ferris wheels.

Another really cool feature in Palette Town is Mega Web which is actually a jaw-droppingly humongous Toyota showroom. Actually, it's not jaw-dropping because of its size, more of its features. It has tracks running all around it and cars travelling on those tracks (think you can actually take rides on those cars). I thought that was amazing. I mean, I've always thought car showrooms were tiny, boring things teeming with salespersons. Well, now I know that they are so here but not in other places. (I don't have any pictures of Mega Web cos I was too excited to get to the ferris wheel.)

Odaiba is pretty flat and spacious compared to other places I went to in Tokyo. Lots of walkways flanked by trees.


Outside Aquacity, which is a mall near the Daiba train station. Just outside of it, you can stroll on the boardwalks and see a downsized Statue of Liberty,



Rainbow Bridge,



and a kickass sunset, complete with a bunch of ducks swimming along. Wonder where they went.



Above are shots taken with Blackbird, Fly on Lomo Slides. Below are all by Holga 135BC on mostly Kodak Ektachrome 64, with a handful of Lomo Slide shots. I was really trigger happy that day - way too ecstatic to have so much gorgeous sunlight. I wish all sunlight could be that way and not the harsh, scorching reality I'm so used to here in SG. The Holga shots are more random, perhaps due to the nature of the camera - more snap as you wish and no thought-provoking viewfinder to contend with.

Me clutching on for dear life while on the ferris wheel.




"Passengers cannot specify the color of the color gondolas"




Can't see very clearly but there's actually a bunch of cranes and tractors or whatever heavyweight machinery you call them. There was actually a tradeshow. Could have gone in to buy one of those things!



Humongous carpark.



To go to Odaiba, you should definitely take the Yurikamome elevated train and you should also squeeze your way in to the front of the train to check out the awesome view - glinting water, bright and shiny buildings, schoolboys playing ball games on hard courts, Tokyo Tower, the sexy, curving train tracks, and the first glimpse of the bright and cheery ferris wheel.



On the way back at night, you should also squeeze to the front to get a good look at what you're saying goodbye to. The ferris wheel and some of the buldings have fancy, dancing lights so it's still quite cool.

Ah. I miss Japan.

(Oh, the basement of Aquacity was where I had absolutely delicious piping hot - microwaved - cinnamon buns. You know the ones that are actually long strips of dough rolled into a run and that used to be one of our infamous food fads? You can no longer find any decent ones here, but I adore them. You can actually get them from this place called American Bakery or something like that at Amara Hotel and Great World, but those are just really shit. I love cinnamon rolls. Apart from the cool architecture and gorgeous daylight, I shall also fondly recall yummy cinnamon rolls when I think of Odaiba. )