Monday, September 17, 2012
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Cirque du Soleil and Kooza
Well, although it was raining this afternoon, my third trip to Fair Park turned out to be a good trip. Because the Texas State Fair is about to start and navigating the grounds and roadways are filled with obstacles---mainly large tent structures and stages going up---this was the last trip until after the fair. The corny dog stand was complete this trip and the lights were on. It could have been open for business.Sure would have liked a corny dog since there was no one in line!!!!
The lanterns were still being constructed. However, across the street where the display will be home, the pieces of the last two weeks had been assembled as a whole and the displays were spectacular. The trains were also included on the trip and I noticed an old box car in the area with open side doors and two coke machines inside the old box car. It was unusual and a bit out-of-place for a departing railroad museum.
The route was a bit in reverse from last week as I started out on the service road of Woodall Rogers and cut across to Dealey Plaza where I took Reunion and followed it down and around the hotel and tower coming out on Memorial Drive on the other side of the complex. The Houston Street Viaduct Bridge is between where Reunion Arena once stood and where my main photo op was located. It is where the massive tent and all the support equipment that goes with such an operation was located.It is where Cirque du Soleil's Kooza will happen. The size of the operation was very striking. After stopping at the security post and getting the parameters of what and where I could photograph, I was basically shooting under an umbrella as the rain was coming down at a pretty good clip. Still, as it always happens, something on your list to shoot in the future appears while you are shooting something else. This serendipity was a gondola car of scrap metal coming under the western end of the Convention Center.
Also, Wiki Commons has a national photo contest going until the end of September of historic architecture on the Department of the Interior's National Park Service's List of Historic Places.
I am thinking about entering. There are several images that I could weed out from my portfolio and submit. Something I saw last week also rang a bell that it might be a good candidate for submission so I retook the image from several angles today just for comparison purposes.
Opens Septermber 19-October 21,2012 in Dallas |
The Show |
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Union Station Coming and Going Today
Old Amtrak Rail Cars Headed to a Museum |
The TRE running regular commuter service from Downtown Ft. Worth to Downtown Dallas |
Monday, September 10, 2012
A Vintage Funeral Carriage
In the age of technology where some of you are reading this on your i-phones,others on their i-pads,and who knows what else, you get what I'm saying about technology. While I do embrace technology with mostly open arms, I think that some things done with vintage equipment adds a whole different class of something having class, displaying dignity, paying honor and tribute that technology can't offer.
On the way to my doctor for an appointment, I came across this vintage funeral carriage and two beautiful black animals that would be fitted to the carriage as the time drew more near for a military funeral ride.The horses are a breed like Clydesdales but are not Clydesdales.They are French bread Percherons. Amazing animals. These have the same shag on their mane, feet and tail and come black or white in the breed. It would have been nice not to have the doctor's appointment so that I could have watched the funeral corteges on a beautiful late summer's day. By the time I returned, the funeral was over and the military men were walking back to their cars, Military funerals,while sad, are still one of the most honored tradition this country affords a family for the loss of a son or daughter,father or mother, sister or brother. Their price paid for our freedom is honor and service at the highest level. Thank you and Rest in Peace.
My special thanks to George at Vintage Carriage for allowing me to shoot these images. He also has carriage for hayrides and beautiful white carriages with the white horses for holiday light tours in Highland Park and Uptown.
On the way to my doctor for an appointment, I came across this vintage funeral carriage and two beautiful black animals that would be fitted to the carriage as the time drew more near for a military funeral ride.The horses are a breed like Clydesdales but are not Clydesdales.They are French bread Percherons. Amazing animals. These have the same shag on their mane, feet and tail and come black or white in the breed. It would have been nice not to have the doctor's appointment so that I could have watched the funeral corteges on a beautiful late summer's day. By the time I returned, the funeral was over and the military men were walking back to their cars, Military funerals,while sad, are still one of the most honored tradition this country affords a family for the loss of a son or daughter,father or mother, sister or brother. Their price paid for our freedom is honor and service at the highest level. Thank you and Rest in Peace.
Vintage Carriage |
Funeral Carriage awaits its Drafts |
Sunday, September 9, 2012
Fair Park in Transformation
This is the second weekend that I have made the trip to Fair Park to check on the trains and to see the transformation that occurs in preparation for the State Fair. I'd like to see Big Tex in place before the fair starts but not holding my breath.
There was some activity at the train location where the Museum was before the shift to Frisco. There was a fair amount of people who seem to be doing the same thing. I talked with a lady that was there yesterday and was back today taking pictures. It was pointed out yesterday that the Big Boy will probably not move until after the fair is over in October.That does not surprise me one bit. The logistics of such a move was much more than anticipated. The Santa Fe Engine 48 is being used to move pieces around in the cramped yard so it's going to be at the tail end of the move as well, one would guess.
The prize of the day was finding the Chinese Lantern Festival crew taking up one full section of the parking lot at gate 5 assembling the large displays. Another photographer that I run into now and then and at locations were I shoot as well was there shooting the same lanterns.
From Fair Park it was up Exposition to Main Street and a trip through Deep Ellum before entering downtown. I love the eclectic atmosphere of Deep Ellum. There are really two Deep Ellums. One by day----the other by night. The one by day is my favorite because you find so many interesting things. One discovery that I made and been wanting to shoot for a while was the new Las Vegas-style neon sign. There are several meters but only one parking meter outside the landmark venue for rock groups to perform. It was open and I parked, put my two dimes in for 24-minutes, walked down to Good Latimer at Main and got my shot. Then, it was a walk back toward the bar to where you could see downtown Dallas from that part of Main Street to put it all in perspective.
Traveling down Main thru the heart of downtown to Griffin, it gave me a chance to see the new deck park that covers 5-acres of Woodall Rogers Expressway and is scheduled to open in October. It really is the much needed mental bridge between downtown and Uptown Dallas. There were a lot of people in downtown and mass had just let out at the Cathedral in the Arts District.The sidewalk vendors all had lines of hungry and thirsty church-goers. The City's new performing arts center for smaller groups had a lot of traffic going in and out of the building. It's just amazing what that stretch of Flora Street houses today. The arts district is truely unsurpassed anywhere! New York Theater Companys are stunned by what they see in the Arts District and rave about the technology and planning.
Here are a few more shots from today.
There was some activity at the train location where the Museum was before the shift to Frisco. There was a fair amount of people who seem to be doing the same thing. I talked with a lady that was there yesterday and was back today taking pictures. It was pointed out yesterday that the Big Boy will probably not move until after the fair is over in October.That does not surprise me one bit. The logistics of such a move was much more than anticipated. The Santa Fe Engine 48 is being used to move pieces around in the cramped yard so it's going to be at the tail end of the move as well, one would guess.
The prize of the day was finding the Chinese Lantern Festival crew taking up one full section of the parking lot at gate 5 assembling the large displays. Another photographer that I run into now and then and at locations were I shoot as well was there shooting the same lanterns.
From Fair Park it was up Exposition to Main Street and a trip through Deep Ellum before entering downtown. I love the eclectic atmosphere of Deep Ellum. There are really two Deep Ellums. One by day----the other by night. The one by day is my favorite because you find so many interesting things. One discovery that I made and been wanting to shoot for a while was the new Las Vegas-style neon sign. There are several meters but only one parking meter outside the landmark venue for rock groups to perform. It was open and I parked, put my two dimes in for 24-minutes, walked down to Good Latimer at Main and got my shot. Then, it was a walk back toward the bar to where you could see downtown Dallas from that part of Main Street to put it all in perspective.
Traveling down Main thru the heart of downtown to Griffin, it gave me a chance to see the new deck park that covers 5-acres of Woodall Rogers Expressway and is scheduled to open in October. It really is the much needed mental bridge between downtown and Uptown Dallas. There were a lot of people in downtown and mass had just let out at the Cathedral in the Arts District.The sidewalk vendors all had lines of hungry and thirsty church-goers. The City's new performing arts center for smaller groups had a lot of traffic going in and out of the building. It's just amazing what that stretch of Flora Street houses today. The arts district is truely unsurpassed anywhere! New York Theater Companys are stunned by what they see in the Arts District and rave about the technology and planning.
Here are a few more shots from today.
Neon For Deep Ellum. This is at Good Latimer and Main Street. |
Chinese Lantern Festival is being assenbled at Fair Park. |
Friday, September 7, 2012
Lost Images Revealed
The Baddest of the SS. This is for real an example of "Don't Tread On Me"! |
Air Force One on Final at Love Field,Dallas Taken moments before my prized image from that day's shoot. |
Monday, September 3, 2012
Looking Like The State Fair at Fair Park
State Fair Dates: September 28 - October 21
Work is well underway at Fair Park putting up all those favorite fried food and refreshment stands. The old landmark Midway arches have been repaired from this past Springs expensive hail storm. And there is less rolling stock at the former Railroad Museum. One of two security guards told me that the rolling stock was going out on the third shift because it wasn't happening on first or second shift, which confirms what one of the employees in Frisco has said to me more than a month ago. She had call me,infact. From that conversation it was easy to see that the exit from Fair Park was going to be a "under cover of darkness" move. It's turned out that way so far as the first cars rolled into the Frisco's property from off-site storage with limited public information. The tweets,facebook post and website updates seem to be all "after - the- fact" which is not surprising.
This morning, one of the television stations had a sound bite about the move and the newspaper ran a story that basically said nothing. The route map published matched the hand-drawn one that has been on top of my computer for over a month Anyone with any train interest as an enthusiast already knows where the line junctions are located or can figure it out like doing math in you head.
I hate to say it but I can remember when steam engines were running regular passenger service in the town were I grew up. It was second or third grade when I saw the first diesel that appeared on those tracks where the steam engines had been running regular service. Still, trains and planes hold my interest to this day. The physics of both are more interesting now than they were in my 8th grade geometry and 10th grade physics. It was that knowledge gained, however, that cemented my interest in later life.
Here is a little splash of color from Fair Park this afternoon. One thing for sure is that corny dogs and fried foods will be around longer than some organizations. My dad expressed to me that everyone wants their jewel to be front and center on the crown and some just never ever will understand that it is all the jewels combined that make up the crown, not just a single jewel. Fair Park is a crown and all the little jewels make it what it is and will become. Loosing one or two here and there will be replaced with others that will shine just as bright and not worry about their placement on the crown. Next time you visit Fair Park look up at the two gate markers.The left one in engraved 1836 and the right one bears 1936. The art deco period for Fair Park blossomed in the 1930s.
Work is well underway at Fair Park putting up all those favorite fried food and refreshment stands. The old landmark Midway arches have been repaired from this past Springs expensive hail storm. And there is less rolling stock at the former Railroad Museum. One of two security guards told me that the rolling stock was going out on the third shift because it wasn't happening on first or second shift, which confirms what one of the employees in Frisco has said to me more than a month ago. She had call me,infact. From that conversation it was easy to see that the exit from Fair Park was going to be a "under cover of darkness" move. It's turned out that way so far as the first cars rolled into the Frisco's property from off-site storage with limited public information. The tweets,facebook post and website updates seem to be all "after - the- fact" which is not surprising.
This morning, one of the television stations had a sound bite about the move and the newspaper ran a story that basically said nothing. The route map published matched the hand-drawn one that has been on top of my computer for over a month Anyone with any train interest as an enthusiast already knows where the line junctions are located or can figure it out like doing math in you head.
I hate to say it but I can remember when steam engines were running regular passenger service in the town were I grew up. It was second or third grade when I saw the first diesel that appeared on those tracks where the steam engines had been running regular service. Still, trains and planes hold my interest to this day. The physics of both are more interesting now than they were in my 8th grade geometry and 10th grade physics. It was that knowledge gained, however, that cemented my interest in later life.
Colorful Tent Booths Go Up |
The West Side of Admiral Nimitz Drive |
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It All Started in the wee hours of May 28th when 80 MPH winds was tossing everything against the side of my house.
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