These costume images are cool.My wife and I have always been in love with Venice. Not only the traditional tourist sites but the genuine Venice, the everyday Venice, the one Venitians live in and which the tourists, regardless how many of them there are, never get to see. We went to stay several times a year, and at one point we even thought about buying a place there. And when your heart and mind resonate like that with Venice and you’re a keen practitioner of photography, it is inevitable that you become interested in the Carnival, at least to some degree.
Now, there are many ugly, commercial, cheap and over-touristed aspects to Venice’s Carnival of the 2000s, but there are also very authentic ones. It takes time to insert yourself into the small crowd of the genuine costumés, but once you get to know them and you know where and when to go, you can take one or two nice and authentic photographs, far from the Piazza San Marco...
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Absolutely love Venice and been a couple of times, however we have never been to the Carnival but maybe one day. Looking forward to any more Venice pics you have.My wife and I have always been in love with Venice. Not only the traditional tourist sites but the genuine Venice, the everyday Venice, the one Venitians live in and which the tourists, regardless how many of them there are, never get to see. We went to stay several times a year, and at one point we even thought about buying a place there. And when your heart and mind resonate like that with Venice and you’re a keen practitioner of photography, it is inevitable that you become interested in the Carnival, at least to some degree.
Now, there are many ugly, commercial, cheap and over-touristed aspects to Venice’s Carnival of the 2000s, but there are also very authentic ones. It takes time to insert yourself into the small crowd of the genuine costumés, but once you get to know them and you know where and when to go, you can take one or two nice and authentic photographs, far from the Piazza San Marco...
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Thanks a lot for your interest, although I have to say it embarrasses me: I have thousands of photos of Venice, most of them of details or places that would mean absolutely nothing to people who do not already know the city quite well, and even if I limited myself to the rest of the photos, I would truly be at a loss about which to choose, unless I deluge you under bucketfuls of Venice photos...!Absolutely love Venice and been a couple of times, however we have never been to the Carnival but maybe one day. Looking forward to any more Venice pics you have.
Now they have more problems with rising sea levels and too many tourists, which is a result of the beauty of the place. I also have a lot of photo's from our times in Venice but they were taken when I was part of the opposition (ssh...Canon camerasThanks a lot for your interest, although I have to say it embarrasses me: I have thousands of photos of Venice, most of them of details or places that would mean absolutely nothing to people who do not already know the city quite well, and even if I limited myself to the rest of the photos, I would truly be at a loss about which to choose, unless I deluge you under bucketfuls of Venice photos...!
So, I have for the moment chosen this one from 2009, which is not particularly beautiful but will maybe give you a tidbit of information you didn’t have.
First, you may not know this but Italy is a patchwork of dialects. Some of them are more practiced today than others, especially by dwindling communities that feel threatened by “outsiders”: in the case of Venice, those outsiders are, of course, tourists, and true Venetians often choose to speak Venetian to make others feel they don’t belong. Anyway, this photo shows a typical building erected in the early 1700s in the Jewish quarter. “What? Seven floors, on top of the ground floor? Why so tall? And what’s this ‘Jewish quarter’ thing?”
Well, throughout History, Jewish people were welcome in Venice, or at least accepted, and to my knowledge were never booted out like they shamefully were, unfortunately, from so many other places. However, locals were indeed wary of them and placed restrictions on their activities. They were to live in a part of town surrounded by a canal, with only one entrance which was closed at night. They were all supposed to spend the night within that area and could only go out and resume their activities at sunrise. Now, that area was also known for being the one where a big forge was installed, and in Venetian dialect, the word for forge is gheto. Hence the name “ghetto”. And since that area was pretty small, and the Jewish community was growing, they did what they also did centuries later in Manhattan: having no more ground to build, they built upwards...!
Nikon D3, Nikkor 14-24mm, ƒ/2.8 G lens, handheld.
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The foreground looks like 1/4 or 1/2 second exposure but I'm wondering if the sky is from a seperate photo as the structure at the end of the jetty (lighthouse) looks fairly bright considering the light is behind it. Other than that I have no idea what the 'trick is'?A Breton sunset...
Trévignon Point, southern Brittany, August 2016. Now, there is a trick about this photo, something that isn’t right... Can you find what it is?
Nikon D810, Nikkor 24mm, ƒ/1.4 G lens.
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