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Paris Part Deux!

In August, my girlfriend and I will have been dating for two years. We were talking about what we were going to do to celebrate and we decided: Why not go back to Paris? It seemed like the perfect idea! We’ve already been there so we wouldn’t feel pressured to run around trying to see everything and we could just relax. So that’s precisely what we’re going to do. We’re going to spend five days there this time (a little shorter than last time) and we’re going to stay in Montmartre, very close to my favorite location, Place du Tertre.

Over the last day or two, I’ve been looking back through my photos from last year and I decided to share a few, with a focus on Montmartre and Place du Tertre. Enjoy!


Place du Tertre, Montmartre


The Tower through the trees


Montmartre Walk


The pied piper





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Photographing the Eiffel Tower

I spent seven days in Paris. Not nearly enough time to give you a comprehensive list of the best and worst locations for photos. However, based on what I did and saw, I’ll do my best to help you find some cool photo locations if you’re only going for a short time like I was… Some of the locations may be obvious, some may not be. Even so, I’m able to save you a little time if you’re ever in Paris with a camera.

In this article, I’ll try and give you some tips on shooting the most famous Paris location of them all: the Eiffel Tower.

Shooting from The Trocadéro

In my opinion, the best place from which to shoot the Eiffel Tower is across the Seine at The Trocadéro (pictured right). Unfortunately, the fountains were not on during our week in Paris but, had they been, I’m sure I would have enjoyed the shots even more. We shot the Eiffel Tower from here on a Monday, once in the noon/afternoon time frame and once in the evening. While the top level was full of kids, the levels closest to the fountains were fairly empty, allowing me to set up my tripod dead center without many people getting in the way. Some of my favorite Tower photos came from this location:



At night, before you cross back over the Pont d’Iena bridge, head down the steps toward the Seine for some cool night shots of the bridge and the Tower:



Shooting from Parc du Champs de Mars

The other side of the Eiffel Tower, in the Parc du Champs de Mars also presents some interesting photo opportunities… There are quite a few dirt and gravel paths on either side of the main grassy area, allowing you to shoot the Eiffel Tower with trees, lamp posts, flowers, and park benches in the foreground. The combinations of potential shots is limitless. One of my favorites from this area is below:


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NOTE: Shooting from the Parc du Champs de Mars at night also has incredible possibilities. However, the paths can be dark and they feel “secluded”. As such, you may have undesirables or just plain old crazy people wandering through the area. We were confronted by one such aromatic fellow and it ultimately prevented me from getting some cool night shots from here. Beware.

From the Top, Looking Down

If you’re going to go all the way to the Eiffel Tower, you simply have to go to the top. The elevators stay open until 11:00 at night, and until midnight during the summer. It will cost you a few Euros and perhaps some time waiting in line, but it is well worth the wait. From the top level, you’ll be able to see the entire city, including the Trocadéro, Hotel National des Invalides, the Arc de Triomphe, Sacre Coeur, and even Notre Dame. Your best bet is to take a long lens. For most of my shots from the top of the tower, I used my 70-200mm lens. This helped me get in close enough to some of the other major landmarks for some decent aerial shots.



You will NOT be able to use your tripod inside the Tower but the good news is, the fence openings are wide enough that you should be able to easily stick your lens through them. I even managed to take advantage of my lens’ IS capability to get one three-shot panorama of the city:


Eiffel Tower Panorama

Oh, How It Sparkles

Once an hour at night hundreds of tiny white lights on the Tower light up and sparkle brilliantly for ten minutes. This is definitely something to behold. Your best shot at photographing this, in my opinion, is to get up close, increase your ISO to 1600, decrease your shutter speed and snap. Since the lights are sparkling randomly very quickly, a long exposure is just going to make it look like all the lights are on at once. It might look cool to you but it just doesn’t look right to me. Example below:



See what I mean? Not bad, but it looks like the tower is “frosted”. Compare that to a handheld shot from up close at ISO 1600 and you get a much better look at the sparkling tower:



Of course, you can see the Eiffel Tower from all over the city which will give you a great opportunity to shoot it from anywhere. I found that, from a distance, the sparkling actually takes away from the tower, leaving it much too overexposed. But, give it a shot!

Also, at night, there is a large spotlight constantly circling at the top of the tower. To catch the spotlight in one place, you might want to try a shorter exposure. Or, you may be able to get a cool halo in a properly composed longer exposure. I was unable to get any good shots of the “halo” effect, but you can see the spotlight in the image below:



Stroll Down Avenue de la Bourdonnais

On the northeast side of the Parc du Champs de Mars is Avenue de la Bourdonnais. From this street, you can get some great shots of the Eiffel Tower over some old European-looking buildings. This was one of my favorite places as it gives you a perspective that you don’t often see in the gazillion photos of the Eiffel Tower that you’ve probably already seen. A couple examples below:





The Map

I’ve included an embedded map below with a marker on the locations I’ve described in this article.



View Larger Map

Also, feel free to browse my Eiffel Tower set on Flickr. Every single photo is geo-tagged so you will now exactly where I took the shot.

Conclusion

I hope I was able to give you some insight into photographing one of the most impressive structures ever to be caught on film. If you know of any other cool locations for shooting the Tower, I’d love to hear them!

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Paris Wrap-Up Part 1 – The Gear

Ah, if I had to do it all over again…

Now that I’ve processed all 6500+ images from our wonderful trip to Paris, I’m left contemplating what I would have done differently. Of course, seeing all of Paris in one week is a tough assignment but I think we did pretty well, overall. Even still, if I had to do it again, what would I do differently?

The gear

Below is a list of the gear I brought with me:

- Canon EOS 5D
- Canon EF 24-70mm, f/2.8L lens
- Canon EF 70-200mm, f/2.8L IS lens
- Canon Speedlite 580EX II
- Canon ST-E2 Speedlite Transmitter
- Quantaray tripod
- Lowepro Toploader 75AW camera bag
- 2 camera batteries
- 1 8GB Compact Flash card
- (My girlfriend’s) Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi

Overall, I certainly don’t think I overpacked equipment. However, the equipment I used the least was the Speedlite, Speedlite transmitter and, believe it or not, the tripod. If I had to do this all over again, I would still bring the flash and the tripod… they helped me get some of my favorite shots, but I probably could have lived without them.

The gear I wish I had brought

There aren’t too many things that I wish I would have had with me. That being said, there are a few things that would have made somewhat of a difference:

- A Gorillapod – Some places may allow photography but do not allow tripods. The Notre Dame Cathedral is one such place. I managed to get some decent shots here but it is very dark inside and I ended up using an ISO of between 1600 and 3200 for almost all of my inside shots. Needless to say, any attempt I made at creating an HDR from inside the cathedral was useless. Even if you’re somewhere that allows tripods, carrying one with you all day is no picnic. The Gorillapod would have really helped. According to the manufacturer, it will support up to 6.6 pounds. My camera, with my 24-70mm lens weighs a bit more than that. Even so, I would have liked to try it out. It may have given me the extra stability in a small package that I was looking for.

- A flashlight – This is something I am planning on putting in camera bag for good. I can think of a few occasions where it would have been nice to have a little extra light on me. This would have come in particularly handy for some of the shots my girlfriend and I did together in the dark by the river. It was too dark for me to tell if I had here in focus when we were setting up the shot. As a result, we ended up having to take a few practice shots and hope that we got it. For example, I would have loved to have a flashlight while setting up the shot below:



- More storage – Do I need to explain this one? While the single 8GB CF card appeared to be enough for my shots day-to-day, another CF card would have come in handy. The storage I’m really talking about, however, would have been in the form of a portable external hard drive. My Mac Powerbook had about 70+GB free when I took it. By the last day, I had to keep 8GB of images on my CF card because the laptop had run out of space. One other thing… While I love Apple’s Aperture for image organization, I wouldn’t use it again while I’m trying to conserve space. It generates previews and thumbnails after you import images that end up taking up a lot of space in, and of, themselves. Next time, I’m just copying them to the drive and only using Aperture to edit/crop/resize one or two images at a time (for blogging, emailing home, etc).



- A different bag – I currently have two camera bags. One is a Quantaray Pro backpack and the other is the Lowepro 75AW Toploader. I love both of these bags but I’m not sure either would have been ideal for this trip. The backpack is great for carrying a lot of equipment and the Lowepro Toploader is great for generic photowalking. I need something in between. Preferably, a shoulder bag that carries a fair amount of equipment that I can access easily, without having to take it off, unzip, etc., etc. As a result, I’ve recently purchased the Lowepro Stealth Reporter D550 at a local camera store. So far, I like it a lot. A lot of room and easy access to my equipment. I’ll let you know how it works out in India when I leave next weekend.

That’s about it in terms of the gear I wish I had brought. Do you have anything that you always take in your “travel” photography bag? Let me know in the comments…

Also, stay tuned for the second part of the Paris wrap-up where I’ll talk about some of my favorite photography locations as well as a list of the places and things I wish I had been able to shoot.

Cheers!

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Paris photos complete!

At long last, I have finally finished editing all of the photos I took in Paris. Originally, I had about 6500 photos, from which I am keeping about 2300. On my Flickr page, I uploaded a few hundred in my Paris collection. I give you then, some of my favorite photos from Day 6:










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You can view all of the Day 6 photos here.

We now return to our regularly scheduled blogging…

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Photos from Paris, Days 4 and 5 uploaded!

I’ve spent the better part of this past weekend plowing through two more days worth of Paris photos. Photos from Day 4 and Day 5 have been uploaded to my Flickr page.

You’ll remember from my previous posts that much of Day 4 was spent riding around the Hop-On, Hop-Off bus and photographing the Arc de Triomphe, the Paris Opera House, and the Moulin Rouge. My favorite photos from Day 4 below:













Day 5, as you might recall, we spent almost the entire day visiting Sacre Coeur and walking the narrow streets of Montmartre. We finished off early that day catching some fire jugglers in front of Notre Dame at night. Here are a few of my favorites from Day 5:



















Alas, only one more day of photos to process! Yes, we were in Paris for a little more than 7 days but on Friday, our last full day, I decided to leave the camera in the hotel room. We were just planning on staying in the Latin Quarter and 6 days of carrying 20 pounds of equipment was enough. I’m hoping to get Day 6 photos processed and uploaded by Wednesday. I’m actually looking forward to processing Day 6 because even I haven’t really seen them yet… I left them on the camera because my laptop had run out of space by Thursday.

Also, a few of you have asked when and if I plan on selling any of the Paris photos. The answer is yes. I will be uploading the best of the best to my online gallery as soon as I’m done processing all of them. If you have any requests or inquiries about a specific photo that you might be interested in, please let me know below:

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Also, stay tuned as I will be posting a wrap-up of my trip soon which will include some tips for photographing Paris, things I would have done differently, and things I would do again. Cheers!

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Photos from Paris, Day 3 uploaded!

I have completed one more step in my continuing quest to process almost 7000 images in a week… Last night I uploaded all of the Day 3 photos to Flickr. If you remember from that day’s blog post, we spent much of the day around, and inside, the Eiffel Tower. As a friend of mine remarked this morning, I’m surprised my camera’s image sensor doesn’t have a permanent image of the Tower burned into it from all the photos I took. But, hey, it’s the Eiffel Tower! How can you not take a thousand shots of it? :-)

Some of my favorites below:
















Escargot!









OK… that’s mostly it for the Eiffel Tower. Other stuff coming in the next couple days. Sick of Paris yet? ;-)

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Bear with me… More Paris photos coming!

April 30th, 2008 | 4 Comments | Posted in My Photos, The Traveling Photographer

I want to thank everyone for being patient while I wade through the almost 7000 photos I took while I was in Paris. Almost all my free time has been taken up by post-processing a little over 1000 images for each day. As I’m sure you all know, this is going to take some time. I am hoping to be finished post-processing images by the end of this weekend. After that, we’ll return to our regularly scheduled blogging.

In the meantime, I have completed processing all of the photos from Day 1 and Day 2. I’ve included a few of my favorites below…

Day 1 – Saturday


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Notre Dame on the Seine


Love at the Cathedral

Day 2 – Sunday


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Taking cover


A long Paris day

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Photographing Paris – Day 5

April 27th, 2008 | 4 Comments | Posted in Featured, My Photos, The Traveling Photographer

On Wednesday, we decided to take the bus back up to Moulin Rouge and walk through Montmartre and up to Sacre Coeur. This is a beautiful part of town. Quiet, narrow streets… It’s more like a village than a large city. My favorite part was Place du Tertre. I could have stayed here all day. It’s a small town square filled with numerous local artists selling their work. I definitely recommend checking this place out if you are ever in Paris. Map below:

Email subscribers will need to visit the site to see the embedded map below…



View Larger Map

Here are a few shots from the day…


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My apologies for not keeping the blog up to date for the remainder of our trip in Paris. There were a few reasons… First of all, I had so many images that Aperture on my MacBook was having a hard time keeping up with processing previews and thumbnails. Second, for some reason, my blog was the only site that was loading painfully slow on the Wifi network I was using. Saving a post took up to 10 minutes. So slow that I didn’t even want to bother. And, finally, it was vacation and I didn’t want to spend a few hours per day uploading photos and blogging.

More updates coming as soon as I get a few more images from the rest of the days online…

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Photographing Paris – Day 4

April 22nd, 2008 | 5 Comments | Posted in Featured, My Photos, The Traveling Photographer

Another busy day in Paris! This morning we decided to buy a two-day pass for the open tour buses. It seemed like the best way to travel to all the major sites. We started out with breakfast on Boulevard Saint-Germain near our hotel, then we jumped on the Paris Grand Tour bus which we rode for its entire route before getting off at the Louvre and walking all the way up the Champs-Elysees. We stopped for lunch near the Arc de Triomphe but we decided not to go to the top today. The weather was wonderful but the sky was rather hazy, not lending itself to good city landscape shots. After the Arc, we hopped back on the bus and rode it all the way to the Paris Opera House. This is a really cool area of the city… Lots of shopping and cafes and definitely a different “feel” than the Latin Quarter. After we photographed the Opera House, we started walking in the general direction of the Moulin Rouge. Once we arrived, we grabbed a bite to eat at a small cafe in front of the club and then spent about the next 30 minutes taking photos. After the photo session, we decided to make it somewhat of an early night and headed back to the hotel around 8:30. We want to get up early tomorrow so we can explore more of the area around the Opera House and make it up to Sacre Coeur. After that, we’d like to head back to Notre Dame and Ile de la Cite and actually go inside the cathedral. Another long day ahead!

Here are a few photos from today…

I only uploaded fairly small versions since I am using a wireless connection while I’m here… When I get back, I’ll be uploading larger images…

Also… I’ll be updating Twitter about 2 to 3 times per day. Please know that I turned off SMS updates so I don’t incur extra SMS charges. So, if I don’t reply to one of your Tweets, that’s why. You can follow me on Twitter by going to http://twitter.com/sduffyphotos.











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Photographing Paris – Day 3

April 22nd, 2008 | 5 Comments | Posted in Featured, My Photos, The Traveling Photographer

On Monday, we slept in a little bit and woke up around 10am. We grabbed breakfast near the hotel and then went down to the Seine to buy a day pass for the Batobus boat. It’s somewhat like the “Hop On, Hop Off” buses that you see in major tourist cities. The whole day was spent around the Eiffel Tower for the most part… The biggest thing I wanted to do was get some night shots of the tower. Paris Travel Tip: There are some crazy people wandering the garden paths near the Eiffel Tower at night. We had some old crazy guy who wanted to box me. So, I didn’t get all the night shots I wanted… Maybe another night. Here are a few of my favorites from the day…

I only uploaded fairly small versions since I am using a wireless connection while I’m here… When I get back, I’ll be uploading larger images…

Also… I’ll be updating Twitter about 2 to 3 times per day. Please know that I turned off SMS updates so I don’t incur extra SMS charges. So, if I don’t reply to one of your Tweets, that’s why. You can follow me on Twitter by going to http://twitter.com/sduffyphotos.




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