Ben Rubinstein
pro member
Are you saying there's something wrong with this one? 
Are you saying there's something wrong with this one?![]()
It's back! Computer all up and working and image now properly backed up! I've changed my backup schedule from 24 hour to 12 hour!
I've decided to call the picture 'Square in the City'. Pardon the pun!![]()
Thanks for the good wishes folks, nothing better than after a major computer hardware failure (motherboard, main hard disk, half of the ram) to get the new gear, plug it all in and switch on and find that your RAID disks are still working fine and everything is there!
Having had an eye operation 2 weeks ago which rendered my right eye pretty blurry, add to that a broken wrist in plaster, 34 degree (celcius) heat and photography is pretty difficult and when your 1Ds mkIII's screen can't be seen at all due to it being rubbish in that kind of sun, focusing or composing with a lensbaby can be quite a challenge. Heck getting the tripod open and camera locked on with one hand was hard enough!
Taken me a few years to photograph one of the wells within the old courtyards of Jerusalem. Here is one at last in the foreground. A capped well, one of two in a courtyard within the Nachlaot area of Jerusalem just 3 minutes and about 100 years away from the centre of modern Jerusalem.
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Orange Tree. This is also a 2nd attempt. The Orange Tree in the center of the alley is well known in the Old City, next to it is a pathway which is at various points featured in 5 of my other pictures it is so photogenic. The pathway leads to what was a poorhourse built by Baron Rothschild over a century ago to tend to the needs of the poor of the Jewish quarter. It now houses some 4 elementary schools and the children all pass by this spot. This wonderful child was dancing down the steps on his way back from school, oblivious to my clicking shutter. He pirouetted around, climbed the steps again, jumped down and ended up next to the tree where he stood gazing at me in frank, open and innocent curiosity. Youth, joy and innocence in the Old City of Jerusalem, incredibly inspiring.
Here Asher is the 'contact sheet' from that photo. Taken in machine gun mode at 3fps and about a 1/30th. I find it fascinating.
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Once he stopped at the tree I took my finger off the trigger, I knew I had the shot I wanted in that very last frame (you can see the slight crop in that last frame, it was the only one I edited). I was actually sitting some 5 yards away apparently looking at something else while triggering using a remote radio trigger. Very very useful for this kind of thing.
The monochrome final version has a feeling of a studio shot with the tree as a set prop and the stone wall and stairs as a backdrop, due to the fade.
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I think the most generally valuable element to this series of posts is your "contact sheet" and your brief narrative of your own selection process. You chose what appears to be the most sentimental frame from that set. But I could make a case (albeit, a poorly-informed case since the images are too tiny to really see) for at least one or two others. The first image appears to hold some powerful conceptual potential, perhaps more than the last.
One consequence of machine-gunning ("hosing," I gather it is called in the UK) is that you can't choose your precise moments. Wouldn't you have liked a pose about 2/3 of the way between the final two frames, with the boy holding the tree but swinging his body around it?