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[personal profile] gerisullivan
When you take 753 of them in 6.5 hours, I don't think you can call them snapshots any more. Hundreds may well be "utter crap/focus didn't work/reflection far worse than expected/light is not your friend/just how many pictures of the chess set did you think anyone could possibly need/if only I had a good DSLR" and a multitude of other responses to sub-optimal photos. Hundreds may look like snapshots. But more than 100 pictures/hour is evidence that not only do I have a 2 gig memory card in a 3.2 meg camera, but that I was actually trying to do something there. Something in the way of photography, within the limitations of my equipment, and, more importantly, too many years of a snapshot approach to a field that I occasionally have an eye and flair for.

The bottom line: The Corning Museum of Glass is fabulous, and my first visit there was, too.

The 4-part harmony: later. 'Cause if I start now, I'll spend the next 5-8 hours writing and editing photos rather than sleeping.

Fabulous. Utterly, marvelously fabulous. And just when you think you've seen, stared at, and adored or dismissed all of the amazing glass they have on exhibit, you walk across the small parking lot and have your mind blown all over again by the Frederick Carder display room.

Nothing I found in a quick online search does anything close to justice to the man. But here's a quick overview of co-founder of Steuben Glass Works. The special types of glass for which he was famed in the 1890-1930s era are presented, including Aurene, Tyrian, Verre de Soie, Cyprian, Ivrene, Cintra, Cluthra, Intarsia, Diatreta, and others, as well as all colors and the engraved, cut, and etched patterns. And the man loved color as much as he loved glass. Win-win.

Stopping now. For now, anyway.

P.S. Thanks for the memory, [livejournal.com profile] benveniste. I think I did good things with it.

Date: 2008-12-17 03:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elaine-brennan.livejournal.com
Yay, glass. Yay, picture-taking. I look forward to seeing the results.

Date: 2008-12-17 03:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wild-irises.livejournal.com
We went regularly to the Corning Glass Museum when I was growing up in Syracuse. I used to love it dearly and my fascination with glass-blowing dates from watching it there.

It's more than forty years (!) since I've been there; I look forward to learning from you about how much it has changed.

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