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My Street Portraits & People

fahim mohammed

Well-known member
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fahim mohammed

Well-known member
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I'd love to see more of this group. Young priest, "interns"/"scholars"? The fellow on the right is especially captivating.

Asher
 
Hello there

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Fahim Mohammed: The Milkman

lux 50mm asph


Nice work Fahim. The natural shoot is always more expressing.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

fahim mohammed

Well-known member
A very unusual lady. A keeper I'd say.

Asher

Yes sir..a keeper for sure.

Fahim,

Your picture catches fatigue and forlorn acceptance of fate, as if they have been left behind.

Keeping the color shows the garishness of the surroundings. What happens in B&W? Does the mood change?

Asher

Asher, I tried B&W..somehow the scene did not lend itself to that treatment imo.

Thank you for your comments.
 

fahim mohammed

Well-known member
Mark, thanks for looking in. Yes I noticed it and wanted to crop it out!!

Felt lazy and left it in. Now that you mention it..I realize why I am not a visionary!!

Thanks Mark and take care.
 

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
Asking for more!


Fahim,

This is a such an interesting shot with the empty baskets giving so much form and the potential for us bringing our own ideas to the picture. You were lucky she didn't whip the cloth over her face to shut out your gaze!

There's a song by Leonard Cohen, one of the most important Canadian songwriters and poets of the 20th century. He talks about being satisfied and humble about what one has versus asking for one's full share. The choice is harsh and contrary.

Listen to him sing "Bird on the Wire" and listen more closely at 2 minutes 18 seconds:


I saw a beggar leaning on his wooden crutch
He said to me, "You must not ask for so much"
And a pretty woman leaning in her darkened door
She cried to me, "Hey, why not ask for more?"

© LEONARD COHEN STRANGER MUSIC INC;

I myself always follow the encouragement of that pretty woman in the darkened door to seek a full measure of life, but with courtesy and not greed. Back to your picture! I know and now admit being a glutton here, as I already enjoy what you've generously shared! Still, I feel that it might have such further potential, that I'd spend the ridiculous time cloning out the last object on the right, (which is hardly characterized anyway), and rebuilding the very last basket. That would give her and the empty baskets full control of the space in your photograph. Alternatively, rebuild the bucket on the right adding some background there too.

Thanks for this and all the so human pictures that you and Ayesha generously share. Having these varied samplings of people you have seen in your travels, here in one thread, is a perfect treat that gets better day by day.

Asher
 

fahim mohammed

Well-known member
Fahim,

...
I saw a beggar leaning on his wooden crutch
He said to me, "You must not ask for so much"
And a pretty woman leaning in her darkened door
She cried to me, "Hey, why not ask for more?"

© LEONARD COHEN STRANGER MUSIC INC;

....
Thanks for this and all the so human pictures that you and Ayesha generously share. Having these varied samplings of people you have seen in your travels, here in one thread, is a perfect treat that gets better day by day.

Asher

Much appreciated Asher. I shall leave the cloning to the stem cell folks..at least on this first pass!!

Beautiful lyrics indeed. I shall check out the url you kindly provided.

Best regards.
 

fahim mohammed

Well-known member
I had to reduce the contrast and soften the lady's image. The gentleman's image is left as is.

Luckily I did not take Ayesha's pic with this setup. Be careful what lens you use before taking a lady's
picture.

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p978626271.jpg

The lens, in this instance, was the 75mm Summicron-M Aspherical. Not a lens to flatter the ladies.
 

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
I had to reduce the contrast and soften the lady's image. The gentleman's image is left as is.

Luckily I did not take Ayesha's pic with this setup. Be careful what lens you use before taking a lady's
picture.

p903366630.jpg



The lens, in this instance, was the 75mm Summicron-M Aspherical. Not a lens to flatter the ladies.

Fahim,

Here one can see why the early 20th Century gave rise to a search for soft focus solutions. Maybe have an inexpensive filter, scratched preferably!

Asher
 
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