Showing posts with label Camera-brain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camera-brain. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Red Alert

Is This Just Another Flasher?

Photographs copyright: DAVID McMAHON


I often use the phrase ''camera-brain'' when I refer to the mode of heightened perception common to photographers (professionals and amateurs alike) who walk down a street with a camera in their hand or slung round their shoulder.

I shot these two images a couple of months ago, on a bright, sunny summer afternoon just before the tragic bushfires hit my home state.

I guess at first glance it looks like one of the red-and-blue lights on the roof of a police car, doesn’t it? But no, it isn’t. It’s a footpath-sited lamp that is much larger than the average police light. When I first saw it, I was puzzled. I wondered what purpose a solitary light could possibly serve, especially in such a strange location.

Then I looked around and realized that it serves a specific safety purpose. You see, it is only a few feet away from a sliding, concertina-type access door to an underground parking lot. That’s when I realised the purpose behind the light.

It’s located at car window level. And it's housed, as you can see, in a thick rubber foundation, designed to prevent the lamp breaking in the event of an impact. It starts flashing automatically when the access door opens. Because the door can be out of the line of sight to some pedestrians (and drivers who are looking for a brief illegal parking spot) it serves as a perfectly-placed warning.


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Friday, February 27, 2009

Mirror Image

Welcome To Back-To-Front Alley

Photographs copyright: DAVID McMAHON


This shot was taken on a humid afternoon in Singapore, just over a year ago. I was in the vicinity of Mosque Street, keeping my eyes peeled for unusual sights to photograph. I have a theory that what I call the "camera-brain'' in each human is another sense in addition to sight, hearing, touch, smell and taste.

It's just that some of us never flip the switch to activate the "camera-brain''. This phrase simply refers to the ability to look at something differently when you have a camera in your hand, to recognise that something small or inconsequential can produce a striking image.

That afternoon in Singapore, as I crossed a narrow lane, I saw a weather-beaten motorcycle parked opposite me. In front of the motorcycle was a dun-coloured wall. I had no reason to walk across, but I did. That's when I saw that the dusty rear-view mirror on the right handlebar was reflecting a street view from behind me.

Like any mirror image, it was laterally inverted, or reversed. But because the dun-coloured wall is the only background, it's a perfectly static anchor for the image. I think the eye is drawn to this image because it looks as if something is wrong - and then the brain works out that it's not ``wrong'', just unusual.

If you have time, let me know what you think of this shot. And don't forget to switch on your camera-brain. It's easy. Trust me.

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