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Rome, IT

  

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Luca Sartoni

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Night photo of Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome

Rome surprising

Rom Ă¼berrasch

So here we are, on the road again, and I hadn't sorted out the Sony A6000 to Snapseed interfaces.

 

I shoot RAW and my image transfers from this trip look meh. After 4 weeks it finally occurred to me to look at the file size. Lo and behold, thumbnail jpgs were transferred. Ugh.

 

This is why my cellphone images look sharp on Flickr and the A6000 images do not.

 

I tested shooting RAW + JPG and the good, full Rez JPG does transfer. Lesson learned.

 

Next thing is image processing.

 

I read about how Norman Seeff used to print high contrast works with a twist. He used a black stocking between the enlarger lens and paper to give a interesting softness to some of his images.

 

He wasn't by any means the only one to do this.

 

When I worked at Samy Cameras photo lab on Sunset Blvd in Hollyweird we used to do this at client request. It was really no big deal.

 

What was a bigger deal was our use of Agfa Portriga Rapid 111 Glossy paper. It gave a gorgeous deep walnut brown tone. We used this for may of the gallery shows we printed for various then famous photographers.

 

Taking the black stocking idea and borrowing tones from Portriga Rapid, it turns out, expresses pretty well how I feel about Rome.

 

So, here is a series of images done in an old, outdated, likely not very hip manner.

Rome wasn't built in a day and you'll need much more than a day to take in this timeless city. The city is a real-life collage of piazzas, open-air markets, and astonishing historic sites.

Rome is the capital of Italy and the largest and most populous city in the country. It covers an area of 1,285 square kilometres and has nearly 3 million residents.

Most Visited Tourist Attractions In Rome , The Pantheon, Trevi Fountain, Roman Forum, Spanish steps, Piazza del Campidoglio, Castel Sant’Angelo, Vatican, St. Peter’s Basilica, Colosseum, piazza Venezia, piazza Navona, piazza Barberini, piazza della Rotonda, piazza della Minerva ,piazza del Popolo etc

 

©Lemo. Italie, Rome. juin 2008.

Le Colisee

© 2010 Sasaki Makoto All Rights Reserved.

Fontana del Nettuno (Fountain of Neptune) is a fountain in Rome, Italy, located at the north end of the Piazza Navona.[1] It was once called "Fontana dei Calderari" because it was located close to a small alley with blacksmith's workshops, makers of pots and pans and of other metal based businesses, all of them generating heat.

 

The restoration of the Roman Aqua Virgo aqueduct in 1570 was immediately followed by the start of work on a continuation water supply pipe towards the district of the old Campo Marzio, which following the diminution of the city's size and importance was left as the most densely populated part of the city. Restoration of a piped water supply in turn permitted the construction of several public fountains. The basin of the Fontana del Nettuno, (without the sculptures) was designed in 1574 by Giacomo Della Porta, who was also responsible for the Moor Fountain at the other side of the square. It was sponsored by pope Gregory XIII. The lower part of the basin consists of white marble and the upper part of the local stone from Pietrasanta. For the next 300 years, the fountain survived without statues.

 

Nineteenth-century infrastructure developments reduced dependence on urban fountains for drinking and washing purposes but increased their visual and political importance, especially following the creation of the Italian state with Rome as its capital after 1870. The fountain as it exists today was finally completed in 1878 by Antonio della Bitta, who added the imposing sculpture of "Neptune fighting with an octopus", and Gregorio ZappalĂ , who created the other sculptures, based on the mythological theme of the "Nereids with cupids and walruses". This statuary was added following a competition in 1873, in order to balance that of the Moor Fountain on the south side of the piazza and of the Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi (Fountain of the Four Rivers) at its centre.

Pantheon exterior, stripped of marble that went to Saint Peter's Cathedral

Entrée dans les Forums par l 'Arco di Settimio Severo

photo prise en 1991 et scannée

25 July 2023, Rome, Italy - Side Events: Food Systems Transformation Amid Polycrisis Addressing climate, food insecurity, malnutrition, and conflict. UN Food Systems Summit +2 Stocktaking Moment. FAO headquarters, (German Room).

 

Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/Riccardo De Luca. Editorial use only. Copyright ©FAO.

28 May 2019, Rome, Italy - Launch of UN Decade of Family Farming - DAY OF DIALOGUE: PRIORITY TECHNICAL ISSUES RELATED TO FAMILY FARMING AGENDA - PARALLEL SESSIONS, FAO headquarters (Ethiopia Room).

  

Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/Pier Paolo Cito. Editorial use only. Copyright ©FAO.

The Alter of the Fatherland in Rome.

Romereis Sted. Gymnasium Leiden, 1976

Or to give it its full name, Galleria delle Carte Geografiche, forms part of the entrance to the Vatican Museums. These museums are full to brimming with fantastic exhibits, from Roman, Etruscan up to the times of the Renaissance. This gallery, painted in the late 16th Century depicts all of Italy and its Papal possessions. It stretches for around 120 metres.

Rome, Italy - Patrick Nouhailler ©

On Thursday 22 June 2023, British Ambassador to Italy, Edward Llewellyn, hosted the King's Birthday Party in Rome, the first KBP in over 70 years. The event was attended by over 2,000 guests and celebrated the new sovereign as well as the reinforced relations between Italy and the UK.

Rome from the Hilton Hotel

Our keynote on Disruptive Change in Organizations and our Liquid Organizations and Collaborative Strategy Making workshop - OpenCamp Rome June 5th 2013

Taken from Viale David Lubin. In the back the cupola of Santa Maria del Popolo.

Colonna di Marco Aurelio at the center of Piazza Colonna, with the Palazzo Chigi to the right.

So here we are, on the road again, and I hadn't sorted out the Sony A6000 to Snapseed interfaces.

 

I shoot RAW and my image transfers from this trip look meh. After 4 weeks it finally occurred to me to look at the file size. Lo and behold, thumbnail jpgs were transferred. Ugh.

 

This is why my cellphone images look sharp on Flickr and the A6000 images do not.

 

I tested shooting RAW + JPG and the good, full Rez JPG does transfer. Lesson learned.

 

Next thing is image processing.

 

I read about how Norman Seeff used to print high contrast works with a twist. He used a black stocking between the enlarger lens and paper to give a interesting softness to some of his images.

 

He wasn't by any means the only one to do this.

 

When I worked at Samy Cameras photo lab on Sunset Blvd in Hollyweird we used to do this at client request. It was really no big deal.

 

What was a bigger deal was our use of Agfa Portriga Rapid 111 Glossy paper. It gave a gorgeous deep walnut brown tone. We used this for may of the gallery shows we printed for various then famous photographers.

 

Taking the black stocking idea and borrowing tones from Portriga Rapid, it turns out, expresses pretty well how I feel about Rome.

 

So, here is a series of images done in an old, outdated, likely not very hip manner.

Saint Peter's Basilica in Rome Italy 608

Rome, Ostiense. Gasometro

Please see it LARGE

Rome

Photo by M. Polglase

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