Vlad Dodan – weblog
26Nov/093

Leica 15-16 (Andreea and Coen)

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Kodak TRI-X
ASA 400
Processed in Ilfosol 12min (@mini-lab) - and they did a terrible job
Scan: Canon CanoScan 4400f

2009.08.23 - The (Romanian) Wedding Day

I wrote (Romanian) `cause they got married in The Netherlands prior to this event. Coen is Dutch and Andreea ... well you guessed - Romanian.
They decided that a wedding done by our customs will be a good thing.

The day before the wedding Coen got baptized - Ioan so that the holly matrimony could take place in one of our churches.

There are many things to tell but I`m hoping the pictures will cover that.

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And a few from our D90... (shot either by me or by Ioana)
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I hope you liked the pictures and enjoyed the song. (yes, there`s a song at the beginning of this entry)

24Nov/092

Netherlands

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And, with almost 11 days overdue, I present to you the Netherlands entry.

We took the Thalys train from Paris with the destination: Rotterdam. "Lucky" for us, they were working on the railroads those days so we hopped of at Utrecht, then we took a train straight to Hague. `Cause that`s were Pinka and Srj are living now. You`ll see pictures of their neighborhood at the end. And yes ... they live in a red MVRDV house.

In the 5 days remaining of our trip we visited Amsterdam, Rotterdam, Delft and Hague. (if I forgot something, just let me know)

Given the fact that I`m not in a "writing allot of stuff" mood I`ll let you enjoy the pictures.

Don`t be shy and write a few words yourself ... and yes, you can send this link to other people. ;) )

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P.S. The song is Red House played by Jimi Hendrix. I wanted to put another song but I can`t really get a hold of it so this one is just as good. Mainly because we stayed at our friends in a red house in Hague and as a side reason: it`s 12 bar blues and Razvan is trying to get the hang of it right now. Bro, I could only wish I could play 10% of what is Jimi doing by the time you get it together, but you`re getting it wright faster than I can learn how to improv...

16Nov/094

Normandy

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After almost "4 days overdue" according to my "To do" software, I get to show you the 2nd part of our summer trip - Normandy.

And to be precise: we stayed in the west part of it.
NormandyArea-map
This blog-entry will be split into seven parts because it was the simplest way for me to manage my pictures. In some places we went more than once so I tried to keep the timeline in the order of "1st time only".

1. Flamanville - Hameau Bonemains
2. Ile Mont-Saint-Michel
3. Cherbourg
4. Cap de la Hague
5. Clairefontaine
6. Sciotot
7. Omaha Beach, the Museum / Cemetery

(Today I found out how to use "anchors" in a blog-post but unfortunately they interfere with my "return to top button" so as much as I tried to get the titles to send you to a specific part of the entry ... I couldn`t do it. Maybe some day I`ll figure this one out, but for now ... I`ll leave it as it is.)












1. Flamanville - Hameau Bonemais

Flamanville
From Paris we took the train to Cherbourg (the main city in the area), and from there we were picked-up by Mihai and taken to Hameau Bonemais, a little town next to Flamanville.

On the map to your right I`ve marked the house were we stayed and further down the page you`ll see a picture of it. From here we went every day to a new place. This area doesn`t have a beach; it`s mostly a cliff-side part of land but fortunately it is flanked by two wonderful sandy beaches Sciotot and Clairefontaine.

In this part of the world the weather changes rapidly and we had to make the best of every ray of sunshine - thus one day we ended on the beach in our underwear and someone went home (by car) and returned with our swimsuits.


In this part of the world we felt like we traveled back in time. After 10PM all the lights in the town are turned off and it`s pitch black. The houses are all made of stone and the hedges are 2-3m high. This is the greenest grass I`ve ever seen. It`s like God grabbed the saturation slider and pushed it out of the frame.

A truly wonderful place for relaxation after 5 days of Paris...

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Leica M6 - Kodak Ektar 100

2. Ile Mont-Saint-Michel

saint_michelIle Mont-Saint-Michel is a rocky tidal island and a commune in Normandy, France. It is located approximately one kilometre off the country's north coast, at the mouth of the Couesnon River near Avranches.

Mont-Saint-Michel was previously connected to the mainland via a thin natural land bridge, which before modernization was covered at high tide and revealed at low tide. This has been compromised by several developments. Over the centuries, the coastal flats have been polderised to create pasture. Thus the distance between the shore and the south coast of Mont-Saint-Michel has decreased. The Couesnon River has been canalised, reducing the flow of water and thereby encouraging a silting-up of the bay. In 1879, the land bridge was fortified into a true causeway. This prevented the tide from scouring the silt round the mount.
At low tide surrounded by mud flats - seen from the air

On 16 June 2006, the French prime minister and regional authorities announced a €164 million project (Projet Mont-Saint-Michel) to build a hydraulic dam using the waters of the river Couesnon and of tides that will help remove the accumulated silt deposited by the uprising tides, and to make Mont-Saint-Michel an island again. It is expected to be completed by 2012.
The construction of the dam is now complete (it was inaugurated in 2009), but the project also includes the destruction of the causeway that was built on top of the small land bridge and enlarged, to join the island to the continent, but also used as a parking for visitors. It will be replaced by an elevated light bridge, under which the waters will flow more freely, and that will improve the efficiency of the now operational dam, and the construction of another parking on the continent. Visitors will have to use small shuttles to cross the future bridge which will be still open to walking people and unmotorized cycles.
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3. Cherbourg

CherbourgThe Cotentin was in fact the first territory conquered by the men from the North, the Vikings. For these sea people, it was logical that Cherbourg should become a port.

During the Seven Years' War the town was briefly occupied by a British force in the Raid on Cherbourg in 1758. The British destroyed military buildings and warehouses before departing.

In the Napoleonic era the harbour was fortified to prevent British naval incursions. Underwater obstructions were sunk at intervals across the harbour entrance, and then progressively replaced with piles of masonried rubble. Works began in 1784 and were not concluded until 1850, long after Napoleon's defeat at the Battle of Waterloo.

On July 31, 1909, tsar Nicholas II and French president Armand Fallières met officially in Cherbourg to reinforce the Franco-Russian Alliance. Cherbourg was the first stop of RMS Titanic after it left Southampton, England. On 19 June 1864, the naval engagement between USS Kearsarge and CSS Alabama took place off Cherbourg. The Battle of Cherbourg, fought in June 1944 following the Normandy Invasion, ended with the capture of the city on 30 June.

We visited the SeaWorld Aquarium just because it`s the only place in the world where you can see the insides of a nuclear submarine, in this case "Le Formidable" (or in american slang "The Awesome").
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4. Cap de la Hague

La Hague is a region on the tip of the Cotentin peninsula in Normandy, France.
This is the west most part of Normandy.
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5. Clairefontaine

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6. Sciotot

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7. Omaha Beach, the Museum / Cemetery

omaha


On June 8, 1944, the U.S. First Army established the temporary cemetery, the first American cemetery on European soil in World War II.

Like all other overseas American cemeteries in France for World War I and II, France has granted the United States a special, perpetual concession to the land occupied by the cemetery, free of any charge or any tax. This cemetery is managed by the American government, under Congressional acts that provide yearly financial support for maintaining them, with most military and civil personnel employed abroad. The U.S. flag flies over these granted soils.

The cemetery is located on a bluff overlooking Omaha Beach and the English Channel. It covers 70 ha, and contains the remains of 9,387 American military dead, most of whom were killed during the invasion of Normandy and ensuing military operations in World War II. Included are graves of Army Air Force crews shot down over France as early as 1942.

(source: Wikipedia)



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Thank you for the patience of scrolling the entire entry. It took me almost all day to put together. I had some coding problems but everything is ok now.
I hope you enjoyed the pictures and the song (Mo'horizons - So Ma Guisee). Hopefully I`ll have the Netherlands entry done by the end of the week. From there on the entries are already done so it shouldn`t take to much time to post them.

8Nov/098

Paris

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As I devoted more and more time to this hobby of mine I started to wonder "What advices do the best photographers in the world have for us ... puny mortals?" and I came across many good ideas but only two of them stuck to me:

  1. Wear good shoes!
  2. Don`t process your pictures immediately after you shot your assignment.

I`ll will talk just a little bit about the 2nd one.

The whole idea is based on the fact that 2-3 days after the assignment you`re still attached emotionally of your pictures. Thus, the more you let them sit unattended, the more distant you become of them. And by the time you decide to work on them you`ll analyze them with more critique ... as if they were not your pictures in the first place. So picking the favorites and processing only those should be an easier task to do and with better results. Some of the early photographers used to let the film rolls stay in the fridge up to 6 months before they got developed, but in this fast world we`re living in we`re lucky if we can let them sit over the weekend.

I tried the "process later" approach and everybody got mad at me because I wouldn`t give my friends the summer / party / night out pictures the next day so they can upload them on Hi5 / Facebook / personal shrine page somewhere on the Internet. Eventually they got used to it and now I don`t have to worry about that anymore.

The pictures I`m about to show you are shot this august in Paris (and in the future blog posts: Normandy and bits and pieces of Netherlands)

This year 15 days of summer found us in Paris, Normandy and the Netherlands (5 days each).

There`s a first time for everything ... this was my first time in Paris. Beautiful city but it stinks (literally) and it`s expensive. Were not your average "must see everything" tourists.  We don`t step inside every stupid museum we see marked on the map. We`re the kind of travelers that get to know a city by keeping our asses outdoor and taking time just watching the ordinary people doing ordinary stuff.

No, we`re not the kind of "Me Want FOOD!" hill-billies but the "sitting and enjoying a glass of wine here and a glass of wine there" is what I like the most.

But enough about that.

This year Ioana`s parents (or for better understanding: my {somewhere in the future} parents-in-law) celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary. I know what you`re thinking: free booze! And you`re right! The ceremony took place at a Orthodox Church in the Latin part of town and it was simple and beautiful.

Mihai Eminescu - Leica 10 - Rollei Retro 400s

Mihai Eminescu - Leica 10 - Rollei Retro 400s

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I will split the remaining 4 days into 4 groups: Museums, Defance, Street View and Eiffel Tower.

1. Museums

  • Musee d`Orsay - Built in a old train station
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Musee d`Orsay - Leica 13 - Rollei Retro 400s

2. Defance

Grande Arche de la Fraternité

Grande Arche de la Fraternité

Arc de Triomphe

Arc de Triomphe

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9 Frames

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360 of Defance Main Square - 25 Frames

360 of Defance Main Square - 25 Frames

3. Street View

1. Digital stuff that I need to get out of the way...
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2. Leica in chronological order...

Leica - 10

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Leica - 11

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Leica - 12

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The first of the following pictures is shot on film and the other seven were captured with the Nikon D90. This guy was awesome!
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Aaaand back to Leica and film...
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Leica - 13

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4. Eiffel Tower

The tower in pictures...
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And for the next part ... we had to stay in line.
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And after God knows how many steps ...
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And a few with the rangefinder...
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Overall I liked Paris but I don`t consider it to be a place to move to. It`s not even close to my top three places to live in.

This entry took me 4h:56min to write from 0% to 100%, that means from RAW pictures and no idea about the entry to what you have before your eyes so don`t hate me if I don`t hurry up with the Normandy entry.

I hope you enjoyed it as much as I did traveling this summer. Comments are appreciated... this way I`ll know my work was not in vain.

More tk.

7Nov/090

MB&F

bmf

Horological Machine 1

(2006)

  • The picture shows the Limited Edition (10 pieces) Black PVD coated 18K White Gold
  • Price: >140.000 Euro
  • Movement

- Raised central one-minute tourbillon, separate hours and minutes, 7-day power reserve.
- Balance oscillating at 28,800 bph.
- Automatic winding. 22K Gold Battle Ax winding rotor.
- Four mainspring barrels in parallel.
- Number of jewels: 81 (all functional).
- Number of parts: 376 (including jewels).


Horological Machine 2

(2008)

  • The picture shows the Limited Edition (66 pieces) 20.DCTTL. Ceramic & Titanium
  • Price: ~60.000 $
  • Movement

- Jean-Marc Wiederrecht/Agenhor designed functionality regulated and powered by a Girard-Perregaux oscillator and gear train.
- Balance oscillating at 28,800 bph.
- 22K Rose Gold Double Hakken automatic winding rotor.
- Number of components: 349 including 44 jewels.


Horological Machine 2.2

  • Movement

- Jean-Marc Wiederrecht/Agenhor designed functionality regulated and powered by a Girard-Perregaux oscillator and gear train
- Balance oscillating at 28,800 bph
- 22K blued rose gold “Battle-AX” automatic winding rotor
- Number of components: 349 including 44 jewels


Horological Machine 3

(2009)

  • The picture shows the 30.WTL.B Starcruiser
  • Price: ~100.000 $
  • Movement

- Three-dimensional horological engine designed by Jean-Marc Wiederrecht/Agenhor;
- Girard-Perregaux oscillator and gear
- Balance oscillating at 28,800 bph.
- 22K Rose Gold battle-axe shaped ‘mystery’ automatic winding rotor
- Hour and minutes information transmitted via ceramic ball bearings to laser-cut hands.
- Number of jewels: 36 (all functional)
- Number of components: 304