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Joe Breeden Joe Breeden

Black & White Urban Landscape Photography

A quick drive around Nashville one Saturday and I found a rolls worth of interesting businesses.

This building located in a run-down part of town reminds of a time when we were looking to the future. With its golden dome and past-future design it’s like the builders were making a statement that things in the future are going to be different and we want to be a part of that.

Thrift stores are one of those businesses that always thrive, even in times when you think they wouldn't. It’s obvious that the store has been opened for years and you can bet it will continue for years to come.

The House of Pizza is an iconic restaurant here in Nashville. If you have the chance to, definitely get a slice. Or even better, get an order of the lasagna. it’s the best you will ever have. With the changes coming to The Arcade where it is located, if it survives might not be a forgone conclusion.

Varallo’s is Tennessee’s oldest restaurant. If this was the original location it was remodeled sometime in the 1960s or 1970s. This is a place I have never eaten; it is downtown and only open for breakfast and lunch so I haven’t made the trek. Maybe I should.

This gas station is in the heart of Hillsboro Village. While it looks closed it is not, they just keep a clean lot on the weekends. I forgot to write down the name, but I believe it is something like Village Auto-Service. I have had them do work for me in the past and they do a good job.

The venerable Hillsboro Hardware has been around for longer than I can remember. They are always busy when opened and are a great example of how smaller shops can thrive in a community.

Mapco Express, 21st Ave, Nashville, TN

This Mapco gas station is deceptive. The Mapco chain has definitely not been around as long as this building. A long time ago this was a two-bay garage. Guessing based on the curved corner of the former lobby I would guess this garage was first opened in the 1940s if not earlier.

This building was the one I set out with the goal of photographing. The now closed, Coin Laundry Express, was once a thriving part of the neighborhood. It’s one of those weird tales, around 3 months before closing it got a face-lift in the guise of new signage. It’s hard to know what happened, maybe they invested too much in new equipment and just didn’t see the business.

There you have it, a short Saturday morning drive worths of images.

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Joe Breeden Joe Breeden

Enter the Fuji GW690

First thoughts on the Fuji GW690

Recently I finally pulled the trigger and ordered a medium-format range-finder camera. Being a Bronica fan I really wanted the Bronica RF645, but after getting the Tomiyama Art Panorama 170 there just wasn’t any budget for a $2000 range finder camera. I had been looking at some others and finally decided on the Fuji GW690 mark II (in my case possibly mark 1.5, more on that later).

If the counter is to be believed, my example has only had 14 rolls (now 15) of film in it. And, honestly, it looks like a low-milage example. The strength of the dollar vs. the yen really helped on the price. Another thing that helped keep the price down was a quirk of Japanese listers - they only ever list items that are “Mint++++++++” and this camera was just listed as “Good” so the asking price was about a third less than the other listings for camera of this model.

The trusty Bronica S2

Once it arrived I grabbed a roll of black and white film from the drawer, loaded it up, and went for a walk. This camera is a joy to use the only real gripe I have is that I wish it had a built in meter, but it’s probably for the best that it doesn’t to minimize the risk of battery damage and the like.

As the name implies the negatives are 6cm X 9cm and you will only get eight shots on a roll of 120 film. I love the size of the negatives and recently I have been pondering if 36 shots per roll that come on 35mm rolls of film is really too many. I want to be able to have a steady schedule of new images, something like one roll a week or ever other week and having to take fewer shots really works with my style. I try to put some thought into answering the question “do I want to take this picture” with every shot and only having eight shots to take makes that question have even more meaning. And generally speaking, I can get eight shots any time I take the camera out, but getting 36 means I take a lot of pictures that I wouldn’t necessarily take otherwise.

Something I look forward to is making prints from the negatives. I am more interested in the “alternate” printing process like Platinum Palladium and I have been wanted to make those kinds of prints straight from negative. I like the idea of a small picture that has a lot of detail; one that really pulls the viewer in and almost whispers its secrets one person at a time. I have high hopes that these negatives are the right size to really make that happen. Stay tuned for more on this.

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