Showing posts with label Roanoke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roanoke. Show all posts

Sunday, August 7, 2016

Backstage with Miss Virginia


Miss Roanoke Valley waits in the wings

Anyone who knows me has probably heard, sooner or later, my description of the idea photography assignment: to go to some major event (I usually use the Olympics as an example), but with strict orders that, should I come back with any pictures of the event itself, I'll be fired immediately.

In June, I got very close. Thanks to the Help of former Miss Virginia Tara Wheeler, now an anchor in Charlottesville, we got total access to the Miss Virginia pageant for a series of three stories.

As we filmed over three days, I of course had the Leica M3 with me with a 50mm f2, and I found a few moments to make some images.




The scene backstage between events 







Sunday, May 31, 2015

The Return of the 611


After $3 million raised by the Virginia Museum of Transportation and years of careful work, mostly by volunteers, the legendary J-Class locomotive 611 returned to Roanoke under her own power on May 30. I was assigned to join her in Lynchburg and ride the final leg into town.


The 611 as she pulls into the Lynchburg station, with a slow, even chug and bell ringing.



Special guests got to sit in the baggage car behind the tender, where the doors are open to the air. In the passenger cars, the windows are sealed because of safety regulations.


The train paused for an hour while water was pumped into the train's tanks.




Volunteers were rewarded for their work by getting to ride forward, or even in the locomotive cab itself.




Tom Mayer held a leadership position in the restoration. I met him many months ago as he worked on the 611 in North Carolina.


Fifty-eight years ago, Tom Garver rode the 611 on a regular run. He was with the now famous photographer, O. Winston Link, for whom he worked as an assistant. On May 30 he got to ride behind the old steam engine again.



An Art Deco detail on the door to one of the passenger cars.


Ron Davis, President of the Norfolk and Western Historical Society (seated) and Trey Davis make pictures as the train pulls slowly through the Norfolk and Southern Yard in Roanoke.


Virginia Museum of Transportation Executive Director Bev Fitzpatrick waves to the crowds gathered along the rails as the train approaches the museum.


Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Waiting ...


Maybe Presidential candidate,
former Arkansas Governor,
media personality and author
Mike Huckabee
waits in the studio before his appearance
on the morning news.
...
27 January 2015

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

The Memphis Belle


The B-17 used in the movie "The Memphis Belle" came to Roanoke Airport on Labor Day, and we were given a chance to fly in her along with several veterans who actually flew B-17s in World War II.  Of course, it made a nice story ...


Though hot, it was a beautiful day on the airfield, with a stunning sky of perfect clouds for photography.




Before the flight, the veterans gathered in the shade under the wings, where we had a chance to interview them.


Jeff Baker was a waist gunner, handling a .50 caliber Browning like the one behind him, for 28 missions.


Leo LaCasse, a pilot, made a career of the Air Force, despite injuries from frostbite at high altitude.  Now 94, a retired Brigadier General, he has since lost full use of his legs.




The civilian, volunteer co-pilot looks for traffic as we cruise over Roanoke.


During the flight, one vet demonstrated how he used the Morse key on the plane's radio.


A dummy 500 lb. bomb in the bomb bay reminds us what the Memphis Belle's main mission was 70 years ago.  To the right of the bomb, a narrow catwalk to get from the main part of the fuselage to the cockpit.







Friday, March 14, 2014

Come to the Dark Side


Another in the Roanoke landscapes ...



I begin to have some concern that I need to branch out a bit, but I find I am limited by opportunity and time.  I would have to travel some way out of my way in to work to find some other, Roanoke-area landmarks, and I really don't feel like coming in early to use that time.  Also, there's only so many places available (and reasonably lit) at 4 am.

However, as the day goes on, it does become occasionally convenient to have the camera to hand.


Today we had Vikings and ancient Irish on the show.  It all somehow tied in to St. Patrick's Day and the anniversary of a 1,000-year-old battle between the two ... or maybe it was just because both groups were going to be in the parade Saturday.

Anyway, they were admiring each other's weapons, and another one of those moments (the Decisive Moment?) struck while I was in a good position ...


Thursday, December 27, 2012

So What Have You Done for Me Lately?


It's been a rough year financially, but I do what I can.  Unfortunately, what I can't do is get film processed ... or for that matter, buy more film.  Slowly, I've been working my way through the refrigerator (Why do I think there should be a D in that word?), using up old film I had stocked up on for various unfinished, undone or (rarely) overstocked projects.  I'm hoping that 20-year-old color neg stuff I was issued when a wire photog still processes.

Anyway, as I've mentioned, I still carry a Leica with me every day as I do TV work in Roanoke, Virginia, and I still shoot pictures when I see them.  However, until I find the cash to get the film processed, you won't see them.



So what the heck are these, you might be asking?  Look at them as promises of things to come.  On my other blog, the writing one, Cat Typing, I talked about getting an email from a photo agency asking, "What are you working on?"  You can pop over there via the link to find out my full answer, but the short version is: Not nearly enough.

However, I have messed about with a concept on the way in to the day (sort of) job in the early morning hours, using digital Nikon equipment.  So technically, for these pics, I'm not the Guy with the Leica, but just another guy with a Nikon.

Let's hope that I'll be able -- to use a term that amused a coworker no end once -- to make a photo dump from the Leicas here soon ...


Monday, March 19, 2012

Catching Up ... from January


The thing with shooting film is that it takes a while to get it processed, edited, run through Photoshop and then uploaded. As I finish this, which has awaited my uploading it as I took a new day job, five more rolls of film await the Photoshop treatment.

Why Photoshop? The simple answer is that it's quicker and requires less space than chemically printing and then scanning the prints. The more complicated answer is that almost no picture is ready for viewing straight out of the camera. Ansel Adams, it is said, thought of the negative as sheet music, and printing as the performance. I run all my pictures through a process, ensuring the color is correct, the contrast is what I want. There's the electronic equivalent of burning and dodging, and removing dust spots.

I won't do anything -- at least I don't like to do anything -- that I couldn't have done in a darkroom, and wouldn't have done as a matter of course as a photojournalist. Ironically, some of those techniques -- techniques I consider photojournalistic -- have come under controversy lately, like in this piece about contest winners: http://blog.photoshelter.com/2012/03/should-photo-contests-require-original-image-files/. Personally, my apporoach is like Potter Stewart's to pornography: I'll know I've passed the limit when I see it.

At any rate, the picture above needed very little processing. We were in Lexington Antiques, selling some things to the store's owner, when I noticed the sunlight spilling in through the front window. What photographer could resist that light and texture?


God, with his infinitely ironic sense of humor, gave us the birthdays of Robert E. Lee, "Stonewall" Jackson and Martin Luther King, Jr., all within days of each other in mid-January. In Lexington, where both Jackson and Lee are buried, the Confederate generals' birthdays have been celebrated in past years with greater and larger amounts of pomp and ceremony, depending on the amount of government involvment and history enthusiasts ... uh, enthusiasm.


This past year, however, there was more attention as the local Sons of Confederate Veterans engaged in their second year of lobbying to hang Confederate flags from lightposts throughout the weekend ... including the Monday holiday for King. The city responded with an ordinance limiting flags on city property to the US and Virginia state flags. The SCV promptly sued.

When no progress had been made by the day in question, SCV members responded by calling on supporters to stand by the lightposts, holding their flags.




Each lightpost was conveniently labeled with a tag, so the various SCV chapters could find their place.




Bob and I did a live shot at the Roanoke Civic Center for the annual Guns & Hoses Hockey Game, a fundraiser for the Muscual Ystrophy Association. Here, a policeman texts the Roanoke Police Chief to find out when he'll arrive to be interviewed.



The sign amused me.


Downtown Lynchburg in the predawn darkness. We were at Amazement Center, which is just out of frame to the right.








I convinced Bob, towards the end of January and about a week before we both left channel 7, that we had to do something on Djangoary and Gypsy swing music. A local band was performing that weekend; I had grand visions of an artful piece. It all ended with a simple taped interview, some B-Roll of the band practicing ... and us locked out of the venue in the foggy predawn darkness.


It's ironic, I think, that I shot these pictures in that predawn, reminiscent, if I dare make the comparison, of the work of early street photographers in Paris in the time when Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli were creating that very form of jazz.