
I've shot this little free library and neighborhood food pantry before. Not sure if I posted it, but the picture was super dark and grainy using a 45mm. 17, being a bright prime, needs far less light. I am still learning the lens, but I can stand in near darkness, not be able to see what I am looking at directly, but I can see on my camera screen.
PokPok, iconic Portland restaurant that shaped the food scene here and also shaped the Division neighborhood, closed permanently.

I like this shot, but I am likely going to shoot this building a few more times, maybe play with the 'for sale' sign on the building being more prominent. This was a family home where Andy Ritcher did Thai barbecue in his yard, became a restaurant that started a whole series of eateries and now all locations are closed permanently.
It was too dark to see what this mural was outside of a vague shape, no problem for a bright prime:


One of Portland's Wishing Trees. We have about 10, but this is my first time coming across one:

It also has a little free library that is also a neighborhood food share point:

Portland Sidewalk:


An early permanent covid-closure:

Unless something has changes, Portland's public pools have been scrapped and the land re-used for another purpose.
no subject
Date: 2021-04-20 02:58 am (UTC)From:The Covid closures are a very specific pain, still. It's always sad when long-standing venues/restaurants/etc. close, but all the stuff that went down with Covid...
I really like that shot of the house with the lit windows!
no subject
Date: 2021-04-20 06:15 am (UTC)From:Losing PokPok was a blow. We lost a lot, esp in that area. The PokPok closure is also more visible than some of the others. I really want to get just the right shot.